1,573 109 17MB
Pages 223 Page size 336 x 537.12 pts Year 2009
LESLEY9. ROCERS holds a Personal Chair at the University of New England, Australia, In the two decades since completing a doctor of philosophy in ethafogy at the University of Sussex, she has published widely in; leading scientifk journals and has been author or co-author of three other books on animal behaviour and development. Lesley's research. bridges the disciplines of neuroscience and behaviour, and she works in both the field and the laboratory. In 2 987, the University of Sussex awarded her a Doctor of Science.
This page intentionally left blank
NDS OF Thinking and awareness in animals
Lesley J. Rogers
i
A Member t3f rhe Pcrseus Books Group
All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of &erica, Nu part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any kfomatietn storage and retrieval system, wi&out permission in writing &am the publisher,
C o p ~ i & t@ 1; 997 Publiskd by Wesmiew Press,A Member of the Perseus Books Group This edition pubfished in 1998 in the United Stses of h e r i c a by Weswiew Press, 5500 Central Avenue, Boulder, Colorado 803012877
First published in f 997 in Australia by Alten & Unwin, 9 Atchison Sueer, St konards NSW 2065, Ausmlia A CIF earslag record for &is book is available &on? rize Libwry of
Conpess. ISBN 0-81 33-W06-6 Set in 1011 2 pr Plantin by DOCUPRO, Sydnq The paper used in this publication meets the requirements of the: American Natianaf Standard for Permanence af Paper for Printed Gbrary Materids 239.48-1 984.
F86
O N DEMAND
1
N o r S ~ P L WCEIXNES Y
E.
2 Awm~mssaF SELFMD OTHERS Developing an awareness of self Self-recognirion in mirrors Awareness of o&ers FoBowing the &rection of gaze of ~ & e r sand hiadon Awareness and c o r n m e c a ~ o n Teaching Reading anto&er% f i n d state Deceprion Inten~onali~ Suffering v v i ~ohers
Gm,
~ M O R T AND J ~NTEUXGENCE 55
Xnteagence or "nteDigexlees' Versacili~/adaptaibaity Problem solving and irzsight Categoristlrion and concept foma~jion hillemo~abili~es Mental represenm~ons MenmE images of hidden objects
56 60 61 68 71 75 76
MI1I;IDS QF THEIR
Qm
Tool using What can we conclude! FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
Brain size and evolu~on EvaIurian of the neoco~redisoca~ex A leap in rzeocodeal size with h w a n s ? Lateralisadrtn of the brain What can we conclude? S
EVOLUTIOM OF TEE HUMN BWMN The expanding brain Standing on our hind I h b s Hstndedness Tool using Lanpage Mentai representa~ansand art Soeieq, srxpentirions and the h s ~ n i dmjnd What can we conclude?
D
AMitudes and the case for or against CO~SC~~US~~SS
lin&viduaXiv and problems far t e s h g u ~ c a t i o nwilrh other species Asking an ape about its imer thaughts Brain waves and molecules of the ~ n d Easy and hard problems of consciousness G, FEELING AND L ~GEITS h m a l s as individuals and identides lost Do domestic aIlimals have lesser minds? Consciousness and arrimd wegare M o h g the bar~er:The Great Ape Prajeet: T h e hmre of ~ n h ing arrimals
Cbick ayproaches its cagemaze, but does not approach a stranger Ghhpanzee recognises her innage in a mirror 3.1 Pigeun in opcrant box recog~sesrotated symbols 3.2 Chicken in the Gdden ball test 3.3 Recognition of an object by seeing pas of it 3.4 Finches using sricks as tools and pding an a s.tri_ng 4.1 Brain weight versus body weight 4.2 S h p l e evolu~onarytree 4.3 Hippocampus and forebrain in storing and nonstoring birds 4.4 Camry" brain. showing song nuclei 4.5 PaIeaeaaex and neoeoaex 4.6 Brains of ma alian species, showhg inereasing convalu~orrof the neacoaex 4.7 Pyramidal nesve cells in the mammagan neocofiex 4.8 Sizes of four different smcmres in the. brain compared with total size of the brain 4.9 Left and right views af the hedspheres of the human brain 4,10 h a & g tech~quesshowbg acbve regions sf the brah S, 1 Evotu~sn.of the hominoids
5.2 Evolu~onof 'the h 5.3 hcreasing capacity of cranium in hoxninids 5.4 Human brah showkg Broca" sand Wer~cke's areas 5.5 Fronml lobes of chimpamee and human
viii
t 34 137 154 160
X am most indebted to Professor Gisela KapXan, for not only conec.l-ing a &a& of rhis manuscript but also making ents on it, X also &a& her for proof readkg and, especiagy, for t e a c ~ n gme much more about birds in all of their varie~esthan I had already learnt in. nearly thirty years of smdyhg chickens. Her rescue and care sf ai wide vaxliew of injured hstraliian birds brought me into close contact with species &at X: would never othemise have encountered at. such close quaaers. Ten years ago, she aZso took me from my Iaboramry h t o tbe raixlforesrs to smdy orang-utans, a research project that we have shared since then. M.though f have always been hterested in the complex behaviour of a ~ r n a t s ,it was the contact with orang-utans that mmed my arrenhon towards the topic of this book. I am also gateh1 to numerous discussion group meetings with my postgraduate sntdents. Many of the ideas &at X have devetloped in. the book arose from discussions with my c a B e a ~ e sand f ~ e n d Professors s Echard h & e w , Mike Gdlen, J e a m e ~ eWard, John Eradshaw, ABen Gardner and the late Beaeix Gardner, and also Doctors Giargio VaEadgara, Gfn~stopherEvszns and Nicola Clapan, Some of tkese may stgee with some of the .things that I have said, saers wibl not. I am &so most grsttefd for the pasirive encouragement and oher assistance of my publisher Ian Bowring. T h a d you also to &drew Robins for assistance in col_lecringreference material.
I would I&e to dedicate t h i s book to Jenny, Luke and Itdie, who happen to be modesian ridgebacks, They sat at my feet &rough the e n ~ r ev t r ~ ~ nphase g of h i s book. I reaSise &at in indoing so I run rhe risk of being labelled a s e n h e n ~ l i s rrather than a scieabst, but 1 do not &nk &at these labels are in codict.
about objects &at &ey cannot see or about s i ~ . t i o n hwe ocezlrred in the past? Do they consciously make plans for rhe future or do h e y s ~ p l yreact un~i&ngly to objects as they appear and simacions as they asise? h e animals aware of ~ernsefvesand of a&ers or is this an abiliv unique to humans? M of these ques~onshave b e a ~ n gon wherher a n i d s have consciousness or not. We live at a h e when the debate about consciousness Is has taken a new turn and may have greater maning than, ever before. A number of seemingly separate Enes of thifing have come tlogeflher to lead us to consider the issue afresh. Some computers are said to have 'integigenee" and h e y can "leamyin. ways that we never thought possible a decade ago. There is every possibgi~ &at machines of the fumrc: process idomaGon in an even more hman-l&e way. It is, of cowse, debatable wbe&er rbey will be able to "ink" like h m a n s and, as far as T bow, only very kvv people expect h e m to become conscious, At the same me as &ese saphisdcated cornputem have been developed, we have realised that, alrf.1ough humans have consciousness, at least some of our behaviour is carried out quite mcansciously. We some~mespe&om apparendy raher complex learnt sequences of behaviour f d y aware of what we are doing, ra&er like w i ~ o u being t a sleep waker. Of course, this mconscious, or mare often
Da animals have ideas and do they
half conscious, coneol of behaviour usualUy occurs for only veq short per;iods of me, h t it can stade us when we ktvake up to it'. M1 of us must have, cm occasions, found ourselves driving on a famil.ls?rr route, making mrns and avoidinn eafgc, w i ~ o u tbeing fdly conscious of the decisions that we are ma&ng almg the way. Unconscious &oughts and memories may also d u e n c e our conscious behaviour, We have b o w n &is from the me of Freud. T o use the teminolom of Freudian gsychology, our conscious behaviow may be influenced by subconscious memories and dives of w ~ c hwe have no awareness at the dme, Of course, the existence a f these mderlying &ough& remains a matter of smmise because rhey are concealed by t.hei_r very subconsciousness, als too may perfom some behaviousa1 acts uneonsciausly. Some~mesmy dog attempts to bury a biscuit in her bed by wiping the mamess wi& her snout in a repeated and wpical movemelll: that would have b u ~ e dthe biscuit were it on soft sojl. I have nodced her also ping the ground in the same way after she has repr@tated food even hough it is on a hard surface. She rakes ' h a g n a g " so2 and is, scedngly, unconscious of her lack of acEevemerit in. cove~ngthe mat-eriaf. Some readers may see this behaviour as inst3incma1, mearring iheGted or preproed ixl the genes &at are passed on from one gemrarisn to the next. However, even learnt patterns of behaviour can be perfamed in such s e e ~ n g f ymechanical ways. We refer to them as ha"Qts. HOWmuch of animal behaviour is automabe? When. and haw does kfomat-ion processing in the brain become conscious? Consciousness is one of the characterisdes that we have a ~ b u t e dto ourselves aIone amongst anhals, There are also o&er cfiraracte~s~cs that we have used to separate ourselves from other creatures. These include language, use of symbols in art, and tool use. We have also seen our superiority in terms of wallring in an upright posture (bipedalism), having a lateralised brain and being more intelligent.
csnsiderabje numbers of people in .the Western world beliekre &at a ~ m a l sare little more &an machines, albeit more or less complex ones depending an the species. However, there is inwaskg debate about awareness in als and much new infamation relevant to this debate has came to light. FoIlowi from this, there is a new Is and even discussion of intel-est in the welfare of rnes of the present: debate the rigfits of anhals. The will deternine how we treat animals in the laboratory, in agriculmre, in zoos and in our homes. Far from being an esoteric debate, it is central to the cunent concerns about anhal, welfare and anha1 rights. For example, do animals exgerience pain and sufferkg ss we hamans do to the abfiiq to fee1 p a k as being sen~ent.Do love, ha&ed, happiness, sadness and so on. as of bese fefedings, in one way or ano&er, reDec="t.a deaee af consci~usnessor awareness. What do we mean by consciousness? T o most people, to be eonsdous means to be aware of oneseK as well as to be aware of o&ers, bat there is no ageed, singk defina.sion of consciousness, As men~onedakeady, to be able to ~ i &about &hgs not present in. the envirament is also considered to be an aspect of consciousness and so is the ab2iry to feel and express human-like ernorrians. Subjec"u.vel~7,we have no great &ffic u 1 ~in bowing far ourselves what eansciousmss is, but it is not so s h p l e to h o w &out the consciousness of anocher human, let alone ano&er a ~ m a l , T h e lack of a single def"sniGon for consciousness is one of the reasons that many scien~stssay they do not want to sfudy it. If you camor define w h t you are l o o b g for there is no way of smdying it objec~vely.Consciousness is so subjeceve h a t scien~stsfight speculate in &ek spare moments or in canvenallions with each other whe&er it exists but very few of them have conducted experhents or made sbservarions h a t aEempt to measure &is mystex;ious thing we calf keonsciousness" At the same h e as philosophers debate whetfier we all expefience 'red roses9
MINDS OF THEIR
Qm
in the same way and w h e ~ e rwe can ever reauy h o w if persons other &an ourselves are not zombies, scien.tists vvho s ~ d the y s m m r e and function of neme ceUs in the brain (i.e. newoscien.fists) are prepared to accept that all humans are conscious and to proceed to speculate about where in the brain h e y might find the elusive newal ckcuirs in which comeiousness resides, RecenQy3sorne newoscient;ists have staaed to look for elec.f-rical events &at may underbe consciousness by recording from the brahs of a ~ m a t s These * padcular scientists befieve &at consciousness, of sorne Gad, exists in animals, othemise hey would be umble to conduct their experiments. 'They believe that we will, one day, explain, consciousness by the standard methods of neurascienee and psychology, even r;l-touigh.it is out. of reach at presem. Many of these sciendsts are reducdonists, as h e y reduce explana6ons of consciousness to rnolecujar and elec~eafevents. Qlhers say &ztt we will never be able to explah consciousness by chese lower levd events, People of this o p i ~ o nsay that, aJ&ough consciousness may emerge from physical processes of the brain, the firing of nerve cells or shilar events, it is s o m e ~ i n gintangible that will never be reached even by new tools or new discoveries. h this case, consciousness would be an epiphenomenon beyond observitt-isn and measurement. Personally, I doubt wheeiher M S is comct but nor do I tki& that consciousness can be explained only in terns of physical and molecular prscesses. Even if it is 'Impossible to measure consciousness as some sort: of pbsicd enlirsy (e.g. as osciUations in b e cerebral cortex of the brain) now or in the fumre, we may be able to assess its presence or absence by observarion of the beha~ourof individuals. As Marian Dawkns of OxEord Universi~has said, if consciousness has a funclion, it should affect the behaviour of individuals that have it. That is, by obsewing their behaviour we should be able to detect signs indicating whether they are conscious, even though we might not be able to measure consciousness itself. This approach provides a starting point for us. Consciousness
might be manifested in a range of behaviours and we might be able to find paaerns of behaviour rhat indicate consciousness. Tf.lis way a sin@e defmieion of consciousness is not needed before we smrt: &e search far signs of conseiousrress. As Donald G ~ f f mhas said, it is a mistake to use the absence af a d e f " l ~ ~ oasn a reason for not and might be invesrigating wherber a ~ m a l scan thi& conscious. n e r e are new aspects of the debate about consciousness, but tfie issue of consciousness in has had a e proposed very long histoq, The Greek phifosopher &at h w a n s possess the p o w r to reason, whereas animals do not, Acear&ngly, nohuman als simply act on the basis of imate hawledge, foillow set of i&erited mles and with lirrile or progams for behaviour wihornt ~fiw ability, if any, .po adapt: to new simatiions, In the seventeen& cerxm~, Renk Descaaes described humans as conscious als as automaea, m c b e s , 'T%ere were many obem of his t h e who &ought lkewise, Descaaes was fascinated by the f m e t i o h g of the Exman body and made great advances in the sciences of anatomy and physioloa. He was also interested in the new mechanical devices of his day, such as fountain3 wi& mavhg paas, and whd-up mechanical models of birds and s2371er a ~ m a l s . To him, living anhals were sbply more elaborate versions of &ese models, whereas h m a n s alone eodd ~ n k In . response to the religious mores af his day, he assigned sods to humans. Thus, h m a n s were endowed with minds and ~ , sum, 'I &erefore I am', means that sods. C ~ g i t ergo of aU life on this planet s d y humans are bein is S, consmcted divide b e ~ e e nhmains and oher which we cafl &e Gafiesian model, still wide3 our a ~ m d e s today, despite the advent of D a w h " seory of evoludon. Ts put humans at an insuperable distance from the anha1 world was, of course, cornistent w i a the Judaeo-Chris~an. biblical stow of crea~on."="w . as placed at the pimade of crearion, desrcined to rule over name and jusr&ified .in using it to sewe ' f i i s k w n ends.
In 1859, Chwles Damin wrote The O ~ gc$i the ~ Specis and with it he opened up the great deba-te about evolurion, C o n ~ u i t yof species, changing frm one to the next by rhe process of natural selecrion, was the central premise of this rheory.. Most of us b o w of Barnin" seory about evolu~on thrau& namral sdecdon of physical cltaracteristics. Characteristics that enhance survival and reproducdoa of a species in its parlricular enviroment are retained and the o&ers are lost. D a w h was also interested in r-he evolu~onaf behaviour and of the mind. He mote about this h his book The Bxprgssian of the Bnzalbions ia Man and i3ninza.l~pubfished h 1872. T o Dawin and m a y of his cofieapes jeg. Gearge Rornanes who wrote Animal IntellZgerne h 1882) eontinui~ of species development hpGed a gradual evolution of men@] capabiljries, just as occurs for the physical characteristics of animals. Thus, h conwast to the dominant Caaesian model of the dme, Damin oud;ir;ted a &eory for graduaay increashg eomplexiw of menal abstlies across species, rather than a sudden appearance of cansciousness and awareness in. humans. This aspect of Dawin" theory has been largely ignored, wen by the xnajoriw of scienrists who accept his rheory of evoltucion far pbsical characteristics, In fact, the evolu~onof the ~ n has d been a r a ~ e rtaboo topic for sciendsts, Tra&~anaUy, s c i e n ~ swho ~ smdy the behviow of s (i.e. ethala@sts, cornparatlive psychologists, psycltosts and others) have seenuously avoided a ~ b u t i n g Xs. AmibuGng %man"lke characconsciousness to a terisdcs to animals, b o r n as anhopomorpltism, has been frowned upon by scienr-ists. Despite the rise of the sciences that focus on h i a e r processkg in the brain (i,e, more complex processing, r e f e ~ e dto as co&tlon) and on cornpfex behaviours perfomed by ds, it remains decidedly suspect. far "oodhciendsts to r into discussions about als have rbouats m fedings, From a sciendfic position, it is considered to be prekrable to describe the behaviour in sirnple stimulus-response terms vvithour
reference ro &aughzs or ern0u.m~.Followkg this behaviouristic approach, it is considered scienbfically unsouad ta even contemplate vvhe~era ~ m a l s~ & . Avoidance of an&opomoqlnjism is also in m e with &e predominant c u l ~ a land religious a ~ m d c sof rhe Wesens. world, and &is makes it clear ufXly so fevv haw csrztested the absolute vsrlidiw of lfie and-an~apomoqiEric, scientific position, Most ehologists (scieahs~who smdy aimal behavliour in the field or laborarory) adopt the position thst name sefeas for apparendy purposefd behwals &emselves are not iaur in anhals, but the a considered to be conscious of the reasons why they decide to behave in particular ways. By puma scienfsts mean behaviour that ensttres the species, In other wards, if the behaviour us, from our vantage poht, we view it as p ~ o s e m . f i m a l s may behave in. ways that seem to predict fumre events but most e&oIagists claim tba"r,dy the human obsemer ~ g hbet aware of any purpose in Ehese behaviours. are seen to choose b e ~ e e nalterrrarlives but it is ved &at they wei& up the alternatives, &W about &em and then dedde, h h d s are said to f o m "seareh images" or even Ynremal representazlions" but &ey are m t &ought to have &as. This parsimortious approach ~ p i f i e s the scientific study of a f; behaviour and it has been useful Eor describing many asgecM af behmiour, providhg tan@ble explanarlions w i ~ o u talluding to the inmagibies of &ought processes. It is gossibk to describe a gr-eat ded of behaviour, of hurnans as well as animals, w i h w refererne to any mderlyhg &ought processes. Indeed, some scienrisrs who study a ~ m a fbehaviour c l s h that &is approach is essendal. for rigorous invesrligation of behaviour. Undeniably, to adopt such a fhited approach to the sntdy of human behaviour wodd leave out the most hportant aspects of our species. It fouows, therefore, that scien~ficapproaches that categorically deny the p ~ s s i b i l i&at ~ afimals may be conscious must, ul~anately,limit our understanding of the behaviow
als, Xn the past, to even raise the question of consciousness in a als exposed a scien~stto ridicule. Nevedeless, for the f ~ s th e in many decades, sorne scien~stsare now beghnjng ca adhess the issue of consdausness in animals systematricalliy. This new move was largely precipitated by the e&slofSsst Donald Griffm, who wrote the book A n k a l Thiaking, published in 1984, I can remember what a stir he caused at the fntema~onal E ~ o l o g c a lConference heid at Oxford U~versit-yin f 981 he first ad&essed the idea of consciousness in Is.. The audience was ceaaidy not with him then, but now more e&ola@sts, as well as sclienrcists in some o&er disciplines, are t&ng part in rhese discussions. Ironically, we are dohg so at a h e when more and more species of als are becoming e x ~ n c tas ;a result of human hcewention. It is paramcrunt in my m h d that of driving our nearest relatives, the we are at the great apes, to e an by desmcdon of their habiats. A pending loss of such m a g ~ m d emust give impems to the debate about consciousness in animals. Reseatr-ch of consciousness in animds is made especiaHy difficult by our inabiliv to use lanwage ts c with them. h n p a g e is the m a h means by which we h a w whe&er ano&er human is conscious. hatl.les person can tell you what he or she is rhifing about but an a cannot, or at least we camst wderstand what it: is commwicadng. Wihout; the abiliv to c to access als by using lanpage, we may be &ought processes that might be conscious. As h d r e w m i t e n says in the beginning of his book Natural T h o ~ e s of the M i ~ d ,'How can we read mhds when we see a d y beha~ow?'. Some scholars arwe that Ianmage is an essen~al preredsire fclr consciousness. They also believe &at consciousness can be revealed only by the use of 1an~al;;e. Thus, the reasoxling is c If you want to 1 i ~ t consciousness to lanpage unica~on, by defin_Ircion als will not have it, they can learn human
language. That is exactly what some apes have done. Humans have taught some chimpanzees, orang-utans and nicate in English by using sign lanwage choice: to use siga language or symbols ratlcler rhan spoken Language was made because the stnnmre of the vocal apparatus of apes does not allow them to make human speech sounds. The chimpanzee Washoe was the fist to be taught to use the h m a n co unicafion system. Zn the 1960s she was taught to use h e s l a n , b e r i c a n Sign Language, by Beatrix and Alien Gardner at the Universi~of Nevada, USA. Another chimpanzee followed soon after: Sarah, who was aught by Da\nd Premack of che Universi~of nia3 USA, to use symbols for red plasdc shapes backed with wor-ds. She was gi meml and was able to c o r n m ~ c a t eby nnakng .them adhere to a magnetised board instead of using gestures. As we will see in chapters 3 and 6, using signs or symbols apes can u ~ c a t eabout ob)ect;s and events not in their immediate enviroment, By teaching apes to co cate with us, we open up one charnel by which we determine whe&er eonseiousness exis&, but f would like to say from the outset fiat I do not: adhere to the nofion that consciousness can be expressed only by use of lanmage and X do not believe that we should use lanaage as a b a ~ e sto inves~gating cansciousness in. nohuman artirnals* We do not say &at humans who have lost: the abiliq to use fanpage lack consciousness. For example, a person who has suffered a s ~ o k e&at has destroyed rhe cenQes of the brain used for cone01 of speech and analysis of lanaage, usuauy in. the lefi hefisplbere, is nor considered to have lost the ab3iq of consciousness or self-awareness, and Aghtly so. Why &en. shou2cf an animal chat does nor cs unlcate by using human fanwage be assumed to lack consciousness? There is ano.tker mist to this perspec~ve,Is language unique ta humans? Perhaps the vocalisa~ons of afimals have much in common with h m a n lanwage. The complexity of song in birds mi&t be suggesfive of &is. h
DS OF THEIR O m
some species, h r m s of communication other than vocalisations are used ta cmmunicate and aese might seme as a "anwage" even &ough they may not have all of the same characteris~csas h m a n language. For example, facial expressiorrs, body posl-uire and even odours may be used to ~ansmit:infarnabon from one individual to anoher. n e quesdon is, do any of the many and vaGed foms of commu~carion&at admals use have anyrhrng in common wirE.l human language and are they used to co about events that have occurred in the past or place or to make plans far the funtre? C: als is a topic far anotfner boo$ indeed the next one that I am wfiting with my colleague, Gisela &plan, but here I just want to draw a ~ e a d o nto che fact that we might also debate the continuiq of lanwage across evoludonary time versus the discanrinuous appearance of lanmage in humans, T o find out, from a human-cenaed gosi~on,one ~ g h ask, t 90animals have the mental capaciv for language?'' At this point we codd ask what exacdy we mean by "languagehand enter into the conuoversy that has surrounded the teacking of sign language to apes, This exceptionany heated coxxeoversy began in the wake of the research with Washoe, Seepeics, in pa~culiarthe American psychologist Herb Ternace, argued &at certain con&ols were missing from these smdies and that washoe and Sarah did not use tanpage like humans. From his own work with a sign-language-trained chhpanzee, called Nim, he deduced that what had at first appeared to be self-generated conversaeion h the chhpanzees was only mimicry, albeit clever mimic~y,of s u h ~ esims that the humans were not conscious of sen&ng to the chhpanzees-bilar ta the case af Clever Hans, the horse that was said to be abfe to comt but was really relying on subtte cues from his @abet. (see the book by Robes Boakes for more on Clever Hans). Personafly, I believe that Terrace went out of his way ro find reasons to criticise and t h a t fie failied ta understand the bond &at must develop b e ~ e e narumat and h m a n iceacher for
commmicaeion to occur, even aough he e a h e d a chirnpanzee himself. Also, following on from their original research with Washse, the Gardners aained several more chimpanzees and tested their absibes ta sign in response to seeing images on a television screen placed in a room without the prr--sea= of human obsemers, Wirhour an]? cues that rnight be provided by a human, the chrmpamees were able to sign accurately. The language-in-apes con@oversy is still wirh us today but the recent work of Susarz Savage-Rmbaugh, who has taught Kanzi, a pygmy chunpanzee (also called a banobo), to point at symbols in order to communicate, has quelled at least s m e of the scepticism. Kami has been tested for his abdity not just to generate eo unication using the symbols "ot also, more imponand unders~ndspoken English. Kami" aabiliry to mdersand requests impraves when the requests are made in syntact;ically complete sentences, as compared wi& mncated, pid@n-English. He to comprehend ErrgGsh, and I, has demonslrated the abii~tlif~r would wager &at many m o animal ~ species nught be able to do the same. This ~ g h be t patlaicularly m e of animals Iftat share our homes and so are raised in. close contact wizrh human language (see chapter 5). I am suggesring that the abiliw to comprehend at least some aspectrj of language may have preceded the ability to speak, In my opinion, it is entlrefy possible that some of &c: mentd processes that are used for lancage in. humans are present in, aulimals but may be used for a&er functions, perhaps in part Eor un,Iea*cion systems but also for complex pereep~on,for foming mental representabons a f etne visual world and for problem solving, I am drawing anenbon to the possibfii~of an evoludenary. cant_inuiq for be& lanwage and consciousness, togetker or separately. m y would these con~nuidestoday be more dismbing &an the widely accepted candnuiq af physical (i.e. morphological) characterisdes across related species? We recaU the enomous conaoversy that surrounded Charles D a m s s theory far the evolution of
MNDS OF THEIR QW
morphological characte~sricsin the last cenmq. I rhi& the reason why considera~onof rhe gradual evolubon of lanwage and consciousness is so hody debated in some circles is &at in Ianpage and consciousness we have located the essence of what we now consider to be human, and hman. alone. It does, of course, remain passible that the brain. evolved to reach a level. of corrzpfefi~suficient for consciousness onfy in, humans. m e n the brain reached a cefiain level of complexiq there might have been a quanml leap in information processing, and &us consciousness as well as lanmage bloomed de ~ o v o .However, it is equalty possible that we humans are just another step in the ~ o n . c l n u of i~ d that, while impoeant, lanwage may evoludon of ~ n and not be the sxzly manifestatrion of or prerequisite for consciousness. ft is also possible .that different forms of consciousness may have evolved many ~ m e sover in different species, Thus, we A&t expect to find different degrees of consciousness and different manifesafions of consciousness in different species. Evol.u.clcm is not a single, linear trajectory. There are nmerctus divergences, often picmred as branches of the evolutionary tree. The different routes of evoludon occur as the resdg of adaptaeions to dfferent enviroments, Thus, species may be just as complex as each other, and just as adapted to thek a m particular enviroment, but they may also be cogni~velyv e q cfifferent from each other. Just as different species rely an, different senses, some a~en&ngto sounds more &an vision, and ohers more to smells, so too might their mental processes differ. We must look to smdies of anha1 behaviour to try to answer this. T o try to reconsmct the steps of evolurion, we can smdy only the existing species because behaviour leaves no fossil record, From presem-day species we have to deduce the behaviour of their ancestors, and this is the case for humans ss well as tll~xlhwananimals, From absemation of the behaviom of a species we have to decide how they
'thinE or, to use terminolom that is more accepable to sciendsts, we have to assess their i r o g ~ ~ vcapacity. e Cognition is the term used to descritoe the more complex processes that occur in brains, hurnan and animal. It includes higher processing of informalion, decision making, learning of more complex tasks, problem solwing and so on. Complex cognition is frequendy considered to mean much the same as inteaigence, which we will discuss in more deail in chapter 3. Here it is impomnt to paint out: &at htelligence has many meanhgs. We somedmes use the term to refer to a charac~risdcof an individual, sometimes to a characteristic of an. e n ~ r especies and some~mesto a specific behaviow. As David McFarland, 1 Behaviour at Oflord UPljiversi~,W, has fligent behaviour can occur vvihsut cog~ ~ processes v e being involved: h m a n s can o ~ e n tin the envkoment, using our sparial abiG~es,in ways that would seem very intelligent if pefiomed by a robot. The c o n ~ o l of spatial orienta.rion does not necessarfiy require cognizioxl, even &ough the behaviour produced appears to be intellligent. McFarland says that cognieve abiliq is not merely the ability to produce clever behaviour. Cog~Gondepends not on, fixed responses adapted to well-specified sirnations but on. complex processkg of new, or less CO idornation. Of course, a distincdon must be made also beween cornflex c o g ~ d o naad consciousness, It may be possible for complex cognition ts occur wi2;hout consciousness oceumbg, a l ~ o u &it is quite clear that ~onsciousnesswould not be possible Mi'ithout the ;ibidi~for complex cognirion, Cansciousness is related to awareness, inleagence and complex cognidon, as well as lanpage. Gonsciousmss m y be ma~fested-in self-awareness; awareness of olhers; iterational behaviour, including intendonal cornmrxnica~on; decepdon of oaers; and in the abiliay to make mental and symbolic representaGons. It is my guess &at consciousness will be reflect& in an internation of many, if not alf, of these behaviours and modcs of cognjrian. The chapters m
f d o w will examine evidence that: has bearing on all of hese perspectives. From ftae b e g i ~ n g I, am acutely aware that &e history paint with anhals be%nd the and my task is to see wkre&er that assumpf-ion ~ & bet incorrect. h a different world, in a diff'erent place or hme, I might equaUy wefi be sradng ~& the assmp.tion that animals have consciousness, that they are beings. n e n my task would be to see w h e ~ e r &at may not be sa. As a scien~st> 1 would still be faced with weighing up the evidence for and against cons~iousness but my approach would be somewhat &fferent, I am also conscious of the possibsty &at rto adhere to the belief that ;;il has consciousness until it can be proven o&emise a justification for exploita~onof animals, It is not an exaggera~on to say that believing we humans done possess cansciausn s p e m i ~ e dall manner sf abuse and exploitafion of s. The debate about consciousness or awareness in is central to issues of a n h a l welfare. Mthough cwrent concerns for th@ welfare of als in research and a g r i c d ~ r ehave facussed on the ab%v of animals to fed pain, flumre considerarions wiU have to &ke into account new fin&ngs about awareness and complex c o g ~ ~ oin n,. animals.
Awareness of self is a c e n ~ a laspect of consdousness, At a basic level, sex-awareness means to be aware of one's own feellings or emohons and ta be cclnscious of pain, but self-awareness also includes awareness af one" bbody (e.g. allowing recognidon of oneself h a mirror), one" state of mind, one% ssdf in a social context, and numerous other, iU-defined amibutes that we wodd assign to omselves, We have discussed how, in the seventeen& Deseartes and many oEhers advocated the view &at: were macEnes, diffefing from hman-made mackz;ines ody lin, their d e ~ e eof complexity, Accor&ng to the Canesian view, the yelping of a beaten dog was merely the c r e a b g of the arzhalk clochork mac~nery.Today most people believe &at afl, veaebrate animals, at least, can feel paiin, m e & e r the more the species, the invertebrates (a& mals wibout backb such as jelly fish and insects), can feel pain remains umesolved and ufuafiy ignored. Same al species may react to a painhl s h d u s by wi&kavving from it wiaout being consciaus of that stimdus and vvixhour feeling pain. I would be most surprised, however, if all inveflebrates were completely unable to kel pain. The acquisition. of a backbone si&fies an impoflant step in evolu~on, and many other charaete~stics were acquired with it, but many invertebrates have quite complex nervous systems and perform remarkably complex behaviows.
DS 01;THEIR QW
The ab2iv of veaebrate a d s to feel physical pain has e in a n h a l welfare, been the main concern of ~ a s interested As a consequence of accepting &at vereebrate animals feel pstin, most Western countries have in~oducedlegisla~onto protect veaebrate als used in research. However, few e wodd extend ~s line of rhifing to consider &at As may feel pleasure, happiness, love, hate and menal We seem ta want to reserve zjnese cmol_ionsand orjher higher aspects of feeling for humans, but are we concect in doing so? Perhaps awareness of pain was the first aspect of sentience (i.e. conscious expel-ience) to evolve and tlzen awareness of ennorionsxl feeEngs was the next step. It is &is next step &at mast of us are reluctant to grant to anhals. Yet, by their facial expressions, body posmres and v o c a l i ~ a ~ oanimals n~ may express diis~essand pleasure, For exampIe, a young chick emits loud calls with, a descendiing pitch when it is distfessed by separa.tion from the hen or by being cold, and ir e ~ t sso k r caUs of ascending pitch when the hen remrns or when feeding. The hen can interpret Tilese calls and respond accordingly, But does the chick atcmall;y feel diseessed ox ufiappiness when the hen leaves and pleasure when she retnzms? Most, if not all, als can express behavioura3 states of various emotions but are they aware that they are doing so and can they reflect on these feelings?
Developing inn. awareniess of self
We know that in humans awareness sf self goes well beyond f e e l l ~and expressing emotions, Humans develop a sense of self by the accumuladon of experiences, and to do this we rely on memories of those experiences. As far as we can assess, we begin life without a well-developed sense of self, if we have one at: all. The new-born baby can react to sdmdafion &am the: enviroment. Indeed, the baby's filst expression of feeling is to cry, perhaps to express pain. But we cannot remember if we felt pain or any other feeling at the beginning of our lives. The ability to be aware of
AWARENESS OF SELF AND OTHERS
h e self appears to develop with age or, at feast, the a b d i ~ to f o m a memory of it does so. A h m a n infant is at fist unable to percehe itseE as separate from its surrounding envkoment. That envkonment includes other individuals, padcularly the mofier, as well as the physical environment. frt h e the idant learns that it camat acmaHy grasp amactive objects out of its reach and &at its feet me part of the self" The developing brain of the infant foms maps of the infant" own body and of the world around it. himats do likewise, and neurophysiologists recording from nerve cells in the brain (neurons) have f-ound such maps laid out in different regions of the cofiex of cats and monkeys, the only species that have been stludied in detail. We do not h o w with complete accuracy when human idants become aware of their o m feelings and when they begin to develop a sense of self, T o discover this wi& absolute cefiainq we wodd need to co and this cannot be done until heir abiliw to use laneage has developed sufficienoy to tell us what and how they fed, The problem is exaclclly the same as it is for a ~ m d s T . o e of human infants before fmd out the c o g ~ ~ vprocesses they can speak3 we are lhited to the same techniques that must be used flar arz-imals, Yet we a ~ b u t eawareness of emorions to h m a n infants before flzey can speak even &ough most of us do not do so for animals. ~Vostof the psychdol;Tical evidence indicates that human idants develop a concept of the self &am around melve to wenv-four mon&s of age, At around melve nnonhs of age, h e idant vviU look to where another person is looking or pohting, a behaviour refened to as "iokt a~eneionbnd marhng the b e g n k g of a concept of self, as well as a concept sf ohel-s. By eighteen " ~ s menv-four months idants can recognise &emselves in mimors, meaniing that they are aware of &eir own physical attributes, Awareness of self and ohers continues to develop, and b e ~ e e nthe ages of three and five years humans develop the abiG@ to understand tfie notion, of a false belief, A child of about
mxas am;THEIR o m this age can, also a ~ b u t edifferent menal states to o&er people. For example, a fau-year-old child who sees ano&er person peeing into a box can mdemtand h a t h a t person b o w s the contents of the box, whereas anoher person who did not look in the box does not h o w , Thus, if the second person volunteers information about the contents of the box, the four-year-dd ch3d b o w s that it is false informahorr. Tests of awareness such as *ese are, kevitably, confomded by the 1an~a;gedevelopment of the cmd and thus it may not be cohcidenliil that &c age of amining men.tcal a ~ b u d o nis from three to five years. Even in tasks that do not r e q ~ r ea response in tanwage, c o m m u ~ c a ~ o n b e ~ e e nthe expe enter and subject may be codounded by the Ievef of lanpage acquisition. Let us remm to an earfier s@te of development, well before that at which a human may be a c q ~ G n gtanwage. One of the principles of development of the sensory systems (sight, heahng, touch, aste and smelt) is that: they come h t o knc~oxa sequenbaBy. For example, the ab&q to respond to sensov sbda.rion begins with touch and taste and &en progresses to h e a h g ancl finably vlisioxr, This paaem is consemed across a h o s t sill veaebrate species and it has been much smdied. 'The sense of smell usuaUy begins early but it varies b e ~ e e n .species, Self-awareness in humans develops sequendally also, at least in its early stages, but we b o w relatively little about &at process. The development of self-awareness of feelings and emohons possibly begins with the percep.fion and awareness of pain and hunger, folllowed by awareness of &scantent and pleaswe, developing to love and hate and so on. Perhaps animals get so far along &is sequence of development of self-awareness and stop before it is completed, the stopping point depen&ng on the species, Species that e v o k d earlier may stop develophg awareness at an earlier stage compared ~& more complex, later evolvbg species. A notion. such as this is a very old one. It is refenred to as recapiuasion, as it assmes that development recapitulates evolution. Originally it was applied to the
AWmENESS OF SELF AND OTHERS
developmenr of physical characteristics. For example, the dedopment of the h m a n foems thraugh stages wi& gills and a tail and with webbed fingers is s&d to reflect our evolu.tionasy orighs from fish and amphibia. If this is the case far physical characte~stics,it might be m e also for the c0gnitit.e pmesses &at underlie the development of seK-awareness, D ~ n gthe early foetal stages of development3 the human faems may respond to touch by moving but it is most u&kely to be aware of doing so, At &is stage of development it may resemble a lower, invertebrate species. At later stages of gestadon, the h u a n foems responds to pain-inducing s h u l i and it may be able to feel pain, alhaugh it may not yet feel emotions, At &is stage it ~ g h t be Xke a slighdy mare higMy evolved species but perhaps not yet a vertebrate species. Evenmauy, emotional feeling and self-awareness will develop, after birth. To consider that development reflects evolueon does nor mean that the development of self-awareness is controoed by an ihedted grogrm (i.e. by the genes). h fact, Xear~ngand rrtemosy fornation, are essential to the devdopmen~ of self-awareness. Experience provides the buiXding blocks for the self, The h m a n k & ~ d u a emerges l as a result of the a b i l i ~to feel and to stare memories that can be recafaed and applied in new simadons and contexts. We learn to be kshaxzd the end result of this is a uGque h m a n being. We are not clones of each other alhough we may have some rhings in eo Self-awareness is being conscious of b and s s a ~ d e bs e ~ e e none's self and oaers. We learn to recog~seourselves both as physical erahries (e.g. when we W) and as mental endges. We are able to reflect on owselves and we rely on our memodes to a1 is an in&viduarl, Wihin a species individuals vary. in their abjlli~es to learn, to take the lead in diifferent simarions and to salve problems, in their reac~orzsto novel simaeions and in their a c r i v i ~levds, to
DS QF THEIR QW
name just a few of the potential sources of difference. These differences b e ~ e e nindviduals may depend on temperament, perhaps in part: &erited but also moulded by experiences begiming even before b a . Each individual al has different: experiences and &us foms different memories &at are built up over a life-dme, just as in humans. Temperament: i-tfelf is rnoufded by expe~ence,In other words, the hqueness of an individual is not simply encoded in the enormous diversity of our genetie code (our iheritance) but is established by our mique expeniences encoded in our memories. It i s the collecfioa of memories that becomes part of the self: Thus, the c o m p l e ~ qof an havidual self must depend, in part at feast., on the number and v a ~ ofe memofies ~ that have been fomed. Of course, the in&vidud might not be aware of some, or even any, of the merno~esthat it has formed. Cochoaches can learn and form memosies but are not &ely to have self-awareness. Where there is self-awareness, however, the complexi~of &at self-awareness depends on the memories of which the individual. is aware. Species with rnose complex nemous systems may km more detaaed memories and use more complicated cornmu~cazjionsystems, Even the young domes.tic chick has at least fifteen different recodsable calls. &so, .the chick possesses one of the characteristics essential for being an individual, Xr can, acquire i d o r m a ~ o nand encode memories. These stored memories guide its f u ~ r ebehaviour. In fact3 we b o w &at a chick can make merno~eseven before it hatches. It hears the hen" vvscalisadons when it is still an enrbrp.0 inside the egg and learns their charac~ristics.This is also hewn to occur in duck embrl?jos and even in lambs before birth. Learning and m a h g memories before hatching or birth is prababfSI characleristic of all precocid species, ones in which the young are born in a relatively well-devdoped state, but it m y also occur in species that are not precacial,
AWARENESS OF SELF M D O m E R S
After hatching, the chick learns rapidly about the visual characterisrics of the hen (referred to as h p r i n k g ) and, in doing so, it forms an attachment to her. This attachment ensures that the chick follows the ken as she moves away from the nest. The chick also learns ta recoMse its siblings and, as early as three days after hatching, it can recognise the famaiar chicks from udamiliar chicks. Xf a chick is put into &et cenQe of an alley wtay with a f a d i a r cagemate behind a =ansparent plastic padGon at one end and an unfamiliar ccck behind a s G l a r paddon at the other end, it will make a choice and approach the f a d a r chick (Fig. 2.1). This means that the chick can distinguish one chick from ano&er and &at it can reco@se h a t one of the chicks is fadiar, &at it matches its memory of that chick, l These are remarkable ablilifies for a young a ~ m a but, although recognidon of other individuals is a prerequisite for awareness of o&ers, it does not, necessarify, indicate that the ckck is a w r e of itself, Some people "ogeve that
Stranger
Cagemate
Ftg, 2.1 A young chick recognis~)sIts cagemate behind a transparent pan@!and approaches it. A stranger is not approached Source: Modified from Vrxtlortigara and Andrew, 1991.
the chick behaws like a custom-designed machine shped, or adapted, by its own individud enviroment, These is no way of disprovirrg this mechanislic concept with presently available evidence but. it is still apparent that the young chick is a much more complex creamre than we used to &M. More examples of the ckcJbr"scomplexity of behaviour will be @ven later. The development of self-awareness may be dependent t which an. on the social e n ~ o m e n in well as on age and orfier individual characterisrcics. Par example, the g o a a K o h , raised by humans, showed r e c o a ~ a nof herself in ~ n o r by s the dme she was about fours yeas old, whereas some o&er gori11as raised vvi& less contact: wi& h m a n s have failed to do so. Recog~~on of, one" s a g e in a measure of sef"reco&don, as T will d;iscuss in the next secdon. If &is behaviour jlldicates self-awareness, and &ere is considerable debte about: whe&er it does, it is but one aspect of self-awareness. There must be many and various foms of self-awareness, and not all indkiduals or all species are l&ely to show every f o m of self-awareness, Indeed, the self is a ra&er elusive &g, not essay "rid down to a s h p l e measure, if it can be at atl, The psychologist WiJ.fiam Jarnes, writring in. the early part of &is ce divided the self into &ree parts: the ktr;tatehd2 self, takes into accountz only the physical aspects of the body; the "pi~maf" self, refernkg m beliiefs about one" moral standing and h u e dkedons and hopes; and the %ocialbeIf, one's concept. of self as it might be regarded by ohers. T o these "selves" would add the self r at has bowledge of one's own past and of one's s o ~ v e end s desires. Wi&out entering into discussim on the Ikely vagdiq and relaGve c o n ~ b u dons of these aspects of self, it is obvious that the self af humans has many differem facets, af which some may be li&ed to each o&er and others may be same is l&ely to be m e of h e self of
when. an, a n h d loob in the minor does it b o w that it is seeing itself? Recognition of self in a mirror image has received much a~enfionas an ex assessing self-awareness in has been too much weight placed on a l i ~ t e dn m b e r of quite inadequately coneofled experiments with mhors. The mamer in which members of dzferent species behave when rs is fascisla.ting in its o m they see their &ages in right and, whether the individual responds to the ima@;eas if it were ano&er member of its species or itself, does tell us some*@ about self-reco@bon-but: a specific type of sex-recog~tionbased on the visual represental;ian of self in a lefu~ghth v e m d image that moves vvhen the individual moves, It does not provide i n f o m a ~ o nabout reeogG~on. of self using a u ~ t o v ,olfactory or eacae information, all of which are b p o a a n t aspects of the self-image, and it cemidy tells us Iide, if a n y ~ n g ,a f the mental aspects of techself, al&augh ~ s e a r c h e nwho have used the ulique have often Eed us to beheve &at tfaey self in a more total sense &an is acmalIy the case. This is why I say that the research on self-recog~~on h~mors has assmed raejher too central a place in the question of self-recog~Gonin r see heir hages in hey rreat them as though they were anoher member of heir own species. They may a ~ a c kthe h a @ , display few or engage irr. wid hehaviows towards it. They may go behind the mirror to see where the rest af the body is, as did my d o A e y when he once came inside the house and caught sight of lhirnself in. a hdway or, Most specia do not recobse at the h a g e is of &emselves even after prolong& exposure to it. This is, apparendy, not the case for chimpanzees. After five to thirty minutes exposure to a s, chimpanzees begin to inddge in seff-expf behaviows using the mirror. They may use the image to see pam of their bodies that they carnot see
dkectl;y. They pramde the tonwe, clean the teeth or nose and inspect their ge~ttalia,Much of the behaviour in front of a m k o r is playfd. For example, one cX5impamee smck ce2eq leaves up her nose and hit at &em with her fingers, .!U of these chimpanzees appear to have recagrrised that the image is of self. Neve&eless, al&ou& perfomance of &ese behaviours in froat of the or does not appear to be cahcidental, more rigorous tests are necessary to prove this* T n the 1970s Gordon Gallup of the S ~ t U~versiw e of New York, USA, atrempted ta see if a chimpamee could recognise itself in a Mlirror by p u ~ n ga spot of red dye on the chimpanzee" forehead and then waiting to see whether* the cfrrimpamee touched the spat on the h a g e in the mirror first, indicaring &at it did not see Ihe image as self, or whe.tl.ler it immediately touched the spot on its own forehead. Galillup tested four ebganzees, born in the wild, capwed and brought to his laboratory in the United States* ad had fide or no experience Prior to the expe with minors. At the ncement of the experhent, , small cage and a full-len@ each was caged in a s mimor was placed in front af the cage. The behaviour of each c ~ m p a m e eat the m h o r codd be observed b o u g h a peep hole in the waU. At first &I mpanzees &ealted their image as if it were anoher aazee, and rlney enpged in head bobbing and vocalising and .Ehreatened tbe imag.e, But, afier about three days, they began to perfom self-direaed behaviour, using rhe minor to groom parts of The body that they could not see wi&out the mirror, making faces at the mirror, blouring bubbles and rnanipularing wads of food in their lips wh2e looking in the minor (Fig. 2.2). It appeared that they had learnt to recognise themselves in the minor. Then, a&er they had ten, days of exposure to the mkor, GaUup anaescfietised each chimpanzee and, when it was unconscious, applied a spot of red dye to the forehead and rip of one ear. The chimpanzee was remmed to its cage without the mirror being present. Four hours later, by which time Gallup claimed they had recovered
AWMENESS OF SELF AMD OTHERS
Fig. 2.2 A chimpanzee recognises her image in a mirror and examines parts of her body that cannot be sesn directfy S~urce: Adapted from Pcrvinelli and Preuss, 1995.
from the anaes&e~c,the number of ~ m e &at s h e y touched the spots of dye was recorded over a ~m minute interval, They &d not touch the dye very often. Then the mimar wias remrned to the front of the cage and the same behaviour was scored again. Now there was a several-fold increase in the n u b e r of h e s &at the cfimpanzees
MNDS OF THEIR QW
touched the red spots on theis own foreheads or ears while looking in the h ~ o r Gaflup , concluded &at fais showed they were able to recogxl_ise hemselves in the were therefore seE-aware, While this result was exciring enough at the time to be published in Science, one of the leading sciencigc publications for newsworthy informadon, it has subsequently been criticised, particularly by Celia Heyes of University CoBege b n d o n , UK.. First, there was no c o n ~ o lfor &e effects of the anaestheric. Just four hours after being anaesLEze~sedthe chhpamees ~ g h be t first less a c ~ v eand rhen more acGve as the anaes~el[-icwears off. h other words, this could have confounded the resdts that Gatlup coflected. M ~ o u g hG d u p also tested turo oher wild-born chimpamees that had no experience with ~ulrors,he did not have an exact c o n ~ o lin wkch he repeated the e n ~ r e nt but simply applied a cdourless dye to the and ear hstead of the red dye. The two c h h pamees that had no prior experience with show increased toucEng of the red spot when they w e tested irr front of the. mhor. T h i s codd have been because they had to learn to recog~se&ernselves in the firnor, as Gallup suggested, but it could have been caused by a n m b e r of other factors refated to behg more stressed or, perhaps, being less hterested in the task in a geneml sense. did apply red dye to the body &at codd be seen nd the amount &at the ut the aid of a, t increase in front of the d r r o r , In: other words, the increased touchhg of the marked forehead and ear is specific and not a generaf haease in toucfiislg &at ~ g h be t an after-effect of the anaesheric. However, it would have been preferable to allow the ckmpanzees to recover until at least the scorhg theh behaviour with and witbout rhe lheljcs can have very long-lasring effectf and result in quite unexpected behaviows, In response to Heyeshcriricism of these experhental
AWliKENESS 0 1 1 ;SEW AND OTHERS
m e ~ o d s , an experiment was condwted in wlnich one chimpanzee had a spot of red dye placed on her right eyebrow and ano&er placed on her left ear. The amount of touching of borh eyes and ears, mrked and umarked, was scored. WirEz. the mirror present, there was increased touching of the marked eyebrow and ear but not of the unmarked one. m u s , the response is specific far the marked s b ody, but so far only one chimpanzee has been tested in this way* Gallup also tested some macaque modeys using the same procedure that he had used wi& the chimpanzees and they persisted in. reacfing ta the b a g e in the &mar as if it were ano&er mokey. They showed no decGne in dkecGag social behaviom to the m~&eyin the after more than two hundred hours of expos is a "ualita~ve psychological djfferconcluded Phat ence-be~een pamees and mo&eys and at the nidon may knot extend below3wans and the @eat apes. Coneary to earlier belie& humans are not alone in minor image recogition but, aceor&ng to Gallup, we are in a select g a u p together with the great apes and different from all o&er species, We will see later &at this conclusion. is inconecf. O&er researchers have found the same results as Gaaup using the red-spat test wi& orang-utans and goraas, a l ~ o u g h Gallup k s e l f was unable to get gorillas to respond t;o self in the minor. The goriiUa Koko, however, who uses sim fanwage, does respond to mkors in the same way at chimpanzees do, and Lke same has been found in two other g o d a s that have sign lanaage. In fac& Koko used the appearance: she made up her face with the result in the mhor, Xt should be men~onedthat ano&er researcher appIied dye .to the forehead af a chimpanzee when it was asleep and, a&er waEng, it showed no increase in touching the spot when in front of a nor. Perhaps the tic had caused a misleading result in Gallup" e ts, but
hdividuals can differ and only one chimpanzee was tested by applying tke dye dwing its sleep. In fact, researchers at another laboratov attempted to repeat GaHup% mark test using deven cfnimpanzees and applying the dye when they were anaes&e~sed,In this study only one of the chimpanzees displayed clear self-directed behaviour in response to seekg the mark an her forehead. The researchers suggested that individual differences might explain why they found this result, but differences in metbodolom could also eqlain. why only one of their chbpanzees pedormed the same as hose tested by Gallup. In fact, they began testing the chimpamees only wo-and-a-half to three hours after the anaes&etic, and h i s eoufd have been a t been, too drowsy at problem. The chhpanzees ~ g h have the time they were rested, or they might have felt iU, Mso, the arraes~esicused was different from that used by GaBupt and it may have lasted for a differem s me or had different after-effects. So far there has been no completely convincing experh e n t with sdficient subjects and caneols to pemit a definite conclusion to be reached &out selGrecogni.tion in arzzees or any other species. However, 1 must say that the published photoaaphs of chimpanzees p e r f o r ~ n gin front of a mkror (see those in the book by %chard Byrne, The Thisking Ape, or in &e book by Sue Taylor Parker and colleaaes, SeF-awareness in Anhals and Hz~nzans),psamding the tonpe, and so an, give a clear hpression &at they are recog~sing&ernselves. Nevefieless, we must await rigorously conaolled experiments to be absolutely sure, The apparent absence of abIllity in monkeys, as opposed to apes, to respond to aheir image as self may have been merely a result of nor using an appropriate method for testring them. Marc Hauser and colleapes at Hamard 'Unitrersiq, USA, chose to test conon-top famarins (monkeys from Sou& h e r i c a ) tvilh mirrors, and to m&e sure that they would a ~ e n dto the spot marked ~ r dye k &ey applied differently coloured dyes to the mane of hair on
ESS OF SELF AND OTHERS
top of the monkey's heads. This is a visually distinctive feamre of the species and one l&ely to be used in social simahons. The tamslrins with colour-dyed hair looked in or longer than control tamarins that had only white dye applied on their catton tops, By including this conml group, Hauser elbinated .the p o s s i b a ~rha the after-effect of anaeshebc codd explain the r e s d ~ ,but 1 o s b g for longer in the minor could have had sorrre~ingto do wi& being attracted by the colour of the colour-dyed hair rather &an recogairion of self. However, only the individuals wi& colour-dyed hair, and prior experience wieh mkors, touched their heads whge looking in or and, in addition, to e x a ~ n ekaccessome of the mo&eys used t4-1 sible pafis of their own bo&es, as the chhpanzees had done. Thus, this species of monkey, at least, shows some sort of mirror sel"freeogrt_i~onn Species may vary in what pam of the body they ap-fend to, and the dye sfioufd be placed on these parts, Species also vary in the amount of social behaviour that they &splay and t h i s fight be ano-t-her factor in the dmt-ror test, since a ~ e n e o nto the image involves social behaviour. The need for considerkg species differences in minor r e c o g ~ ~ otestl; n is EgMighted by a smdy of 126s behaviour in elephants conducted by Daniel Povinelli. Two Asian elephants at the National ZooIo@cal Park in WasEngon, USA, were tested with a minor measulPling 105 x 241 cm, This is a large minor-but not compared with an elephant, We must also take into account that an elephant's eye is on the side of the head. Elephants have some froxltal vision, but mainly they look sideways. Therefore, they m y recognise each oher from the side and perhqs the whole side, not just the head. The e n ~ r eside of an elephant was not always ~ s i b l ein the mirror, Added to this, elephants may rely on vocalisa~ons,odours and tactile sensations to recognise self and ahers, They would receive none of these cues from theH irnages in the ~ n w h. fact the elephants paid little at-ren~anto their hages in the mirror and, &erefore, Povinelli concluded &at they fail to show self-recognition.
f = e m i d ~they , may fail to recog~sethemselves using visual cues alone, but this experiment tells us rro&kg more &an occur in a ~ m a l s ,what does out self-awareness? Does ~ m o r e c o g ~ ~ o n refiect superiar co&.tive abgeesi A paper by Epstein and a ~ e r sat Hamard U ~ v e r s i q ,USA, reposed that pigeons can use a f i ~ a to r locate a coloured spot placed on the breast and Gdden from direct view by a bib aromd the neck. Each pigeon was fist ~ a i n e dto peck at blue spots elsewhere on. i t s body by rewardhg it wi& food each h e it pecked at a spot on the wing, abdomen and so on. They were also rewarded for p e c h g at blue dots in the cage. Finally, the blue dot was located mder the bib where it was visible only by using a minor. The pigeons saw the dot in the ~ m o but, r rraher &an pecking the h a g e in the or, they bent the head down to aftempt to p under the bib. The pigeons reacted to the the same way as had GaUug" s b p a m e e s . coneludhg h a t pigeons may be as inteXJigent as zees or, at ieasz, fiat they &ght have an e q ~ v a l to recognise self in the mirt-or; the researchers said 'M&ouph s h 2 a t behviour in primates has been amibuted to a sdf-concept or other coMrivt; process, the present example suggests arr account in terns of e n v i r o m e n ~ l events" The assumprion they made was that, if a bird can do it, it carnot be complex behaviour and it camot indicate self-awareness of any sea. We now b o w &at Ffigeons are capable of complex behaviours that rival those of p and &is will be discussed fu&er in chapter 3. One of the most impafi~ntd i s b c ~ o n sto be made about the behaviour of animals towards their reflections in mirrors i s whe&er they are showing social behaviour because they see the image as nnvcher member of their. species or whe&er they are examining thenselves. As social behaviour varies considerably bemeerr species, each species has to be considered on its own terns, Some species are more sociable &an others, and so are some hdivriduafs,
AWmENESS OF SELF AND O T m R S
Also, the kinet of behaviours that are used sociaUy varies. Ken Marten and Suchi Psasakos, in. Hawii, USA, have tacMed this problem in dolpt?lins by l o o b g at &ek behaviour towards mkom and ~ d e o - h a g e sand comparing them wi* social behaviour involving real dolpkxls, They were able to conclude that self-examination behaviour, as opposed ta social behaviow, did occur in the m h o r and video-image s i ~ a ~ o nIn s .ad&tion, they carried out the dye margng test, but used zinc cream instead of red dye. "Xhe dolphins appeared to be e ' ' the marked areas of resdts suggested &at their bodies in the nor they were able to recognise flxemselves. In time it is most I&ely that weB-desimed expe will demo &at many species can recognise themS, and also in photographs and video selves in playback sequences. We might also discover that recogni6on of the physical self is not co&xred to the visual image, and that ssrne species are more dependent on &eir own vocalisations, odour or tactile sensations in order to reco&se self. While m h o r self-recogni~onremains interes~ng,we should be wary of reac;ljng too much into it. The concept of self-awareness encompasses much mare than one" physical a ~ b u t e s As , T have said previously, mental a ~ b u t e sare a part: of flxe self not reflected in rrrkors. Self-recog~donin mirrors, photographs or on f i is s d y one small facet of self-awareness,
Awareness o f others All aniPrrals kteract with each other to vawirrg degrees and at different hmes in their lives. They c each other by rnakjng vocalisations, by asplaqring: h e i r plumage or moving in parricular ways, or by enining odours or other signals. But these b d s of socid bbeaviour may not involve awareness of others as separate selves, as it were. T h e fact that a species has social behaviour does not tell us that the members of that species are consciously aware of the physical, mental or emor;ianal states of oaers.
Ph get dog that becomes miserable when its owner is sad or ill may be aware of its owner's state of mind and ernodons or it may be merely mimicEng the owner's behaviour. However, if the dog acts on the infoma'cion about its owner's mind stalte in a mea&@d way, that wodd tell us sornerhing different, A classic case of the latter d g h t be the dog &at mxls to get help when its owner is in eouble artd. -fkren. leads the helper to its owner. 'T'here may be a more ~ i v i a leexplanabon for the dog3 behaviour than it being consciously aware of the state of the ownex; but let us consider ano-e-ber example that Marian D a w b s has o u ~ e h d her book Through OUTEyes On&? (cited as h d e r rea&ng for chapter I). Rats are social they can learn to avoid poison baits by o behaviour of a cornparrion &at has been made ill. by consuming a bait. Bemet Galef of MeMaster U ~ v e r s i v , Canada, raised rats in pairs and then took one member of the pair away to feed it a novel food. Mter the rat was ed with the smdl of the new food on its breath, its companion would follow suit and readily eat the same food when given a choice bemeen it and another novel food, So far, the companion may only have ~ m i e k e dits pamer but, if Galef made the fist rat ifl after it had fed on the same novel food and remmed it to its c o m p a ~ o nwhen it was feeling ill, the compaxlion would reject &at foad when it was offered. In o&er words, the cornparrion had assessed the physical state of the sick rat and acted on that informaeion, Moreover, the social life of rhe rat is such that: this learnt avoidance of the parficular foad may be passed on to subsequent generabons, A kulmraIkadition had been established. Though the first rat perceiving and responding to some aspect of its companion" smte of health, an h p o a a n t tradition had been acquired by the species. Of course, it might be possible that the r a simply Icarrls to associate tke odour of the food with some: sort of negadve cue from -the body posmre of the sick rat (i.e. it sees it as a sort of punishem and so gets condieioned not to take the food) but, equally, it might be aware of the other rat's
AVAREMSS OF; SELF M D OTHERS
state of heal&, Once the i ~ t i a l e a ~ n ghas occurred, the actual infirmation that has to be learnt in order to establish the social zxra&~onof faad avoidance may not be paAczrfarly complex. Awareness of otfiers may also entail bowing their social stams and their relaltionship to ohers. h excelEent example of the l a ~ e rcomes from the research of Borohy Cheney and Roberr SeyfafiZ who have snrdied the behaviour of wild venret makeys in Mriea, By recordhg the vemet mo&eyskaalls and playing em back ta the modeys at their study site in the field, they were able to assess how the modeys inreqret the caS_ts. Be@ g with .the observation that mo.tker vervet mo&eys run. to help their offspring d e n they scream during rough play, Chewy and Seyfad designed axr expe ent that would show whe&er mahers recog~se their awn offspring" sell when it is played back and whether oher, nonrelated females ignore that c&. Not only did the nomelabve femdes ignore the scream for help by not approacErrg the loud-speaker, whereas rhe motX?er approached it, but: they also look at the offsp~ng'ss & e r when, they heard the serem,. That is, they recog~sedthat the scream belonged to the offspring of that pahcular m o ~ e r .Thus, venret monkeys must have a concept of relazjonships b e ~ e e no&er members of &eir goup. This abifiiry to recognise rdadonships may be a basis for being aware of the mental states of o&em but it is not proof that it occurs. Mhough mokeys may h o w the relationships bemeea other members of ~ e i r poup, they may not be able to disfinpish bemeen their own state of mind and &at of o&ers.
FaHodw the arectrion of g a e of athem and a6an As men~anedearlier, at around one year old rhe human idant will follow the &rection of gaze of anoher person and therefore look at the same hing, or at least in the same v i c ~ q as , that pel-son is looking, T h i s behaviour is
MNDS OX;"THEIR QW
said to be a prerequisite for behg aware of orbers, Some researchers claim &at au-tistic children do not show fouiowing of the diredon of eye gaze, consistent wi& &eir less-developed awareness of the menml smtes of oaers, There may be an aspect of i~ta.t_ion in eye-gaze following, and au~stjlccMdren are less incEned to hitate, They are less a e l y to play games that hvolve h i t a ~ o nof the a c ~ o n s of a n o ~ e rhuman than are nomaX cwdren. Incidemally, au~sticchfidren can recognise &ernselves in rrhese has been very littlle hvesLigation into paaerns of ev-gaze in a~maltls, despite the fact that eyes and eye paaems are b o w n to be very potent visual signals in animals as diverse as hseca, birds and mo&eys, However, there have been a few repom of eye-gaze following in: apes and mo&eys and these suggest &at the apes (chimpamees, oralzg-utans and gorillas) follow the direchon, of eye gaze of hmans, whereas mokeys do not do so. However, there has not been a sufficient number of eonaolled smdies of this behaviour for these indicators to be accepted as condusive. Nso, it wodd be more impafianr to b o w whe&er &ere is eye-gaze folfowing of a&er members of the same species* Apes may follow the direc~onof eye gaze at?rheir human carers, but; would they do likewise for humans with whom they are unfam3iar? Perhaps the mo&eys had not famed such a snong bond with their human earers as had the apes, and this is why they did not foEow the dkec~onof their carer's sey gaze. There are many coneols Chat need to be pedomed before we will be able to draw conclusions. l looking in the s m e direcdorr is observed in the wild in a wide rarrge of species, but this may sirngly occur because all members of the group have spotted the same visual stimulus or heard a sound coming from that direceon, T o be considered as gaze foUowing, one tIl&~dual must fotEow the p z e of ano&er simply because &at individual is loo&ng there and not because any other cue has been received by the follower. Researchers working on wild primates have reported examples that might
SS QF SELF M D OTHERS
rneet this requirement but it is &%cult to prove that there has been no orher signal to cue in, the same behaviour, Richard Byrne relates an example that seems convincing. He saw a wild baboon about to be chased by anorher, The one about to be chased stood on his hind legs in a postme h a t baboons usuafiy adopt when &ey have seen a predator in the distance or anofher eoop of baboons in the long grass, and looked intenGy in one direcrion. His pursuer stopped the chase and looked in the same dkectiaxr. No predamr was in sight, Byme assumed that the baboon beixlg chased had used this as a tacric to diseract the o&er one's a~ention.Such poten~aldeceprion will be discussed later, FoUlowing the direcdon of eye gaze woaxitd, of course, be most usefully applied to derec~ngpredators, Thus, if one member of a group has detected a predator, the other might follow its &ecrion of gaze to do l & e ~ s eThis . wadd be seong reason far the evolu~onof the behaviour, but exaedy wheher eye-gaze folIowing reflects any aspea of awareness of othem could be debated. Relarively s~aightf'oward compualEslons might be used to follow ano&er's direction of gaze and these might not necessi~teadoption of the oher" perspec~ve. There are many o&er b d s of ihtatjon behaviour, For example, humans hitate the way in which oefier people move, p e ~ o r mceaain acts, speak and so on. Much of our culmral l e a r ~ n goccurs by Sm.cion, Some psychologists claim &at irnita~onis u ~ q u eto humans and &at it is inhately rdated to self-awareness and being able to t&e the visrxsll perspective of a&ef.s. m e r e is, however, canvincing evidence that the great apes can imitate. Chimpanzees raised by h m a n s frequenrly irnitare their behaviour and &ose that have been ~ u g h tsign language often imitate the s i g ~ n gof humans or other chimpamees. e Russon of Glendon CoUege in Canada has been smdying i ~ t a d o nin. orang-utans at a rehabilita.tion cenQe in Bomeo m d she has reporled h a t they frequenfly imitate the behaviow of hurnans w o r h g at rhe cenwe. They imitate -the gardener by chopping weeds at the edge of the
path and collecdng &em into rows, sweep the floor with a broom, hammer pla&s togeher, saw beams of wood, chap wood with a hatchet, use a shovel to dig and aEempt to stafi a f i e ushg fuel and f a ~ n with g a iid, to list "ot a few of the imita~anbehaviours that she has obsemed. We h g h t now ask what is the dfference b e ~ e e n bitation and m i ~ c r y . Probably the best examples of m i ~ c r yin afimals can be found amongst those species of bifd that perform vocal mimicxly, The Ausaalian lyre bird has a remarkable ab2ity to m ~ thec calls of otkrer species of birds or of nonavian species in its enviroment, such as the b a r ~ n gof dogs and, as 1 have beard in Sherbrooke Forest out;-side of Melbourne, hiuseralia, the garbled speech sounds of a group of humans. m e y also sounds, such as passing wains and \Fjhisttes, sounds are incoqorated into their song. The same is true of magpies, pahcularly hose raised in close eontacrt: with humans, and we are all very f a d i a r with the d ~ c b g of human speech by parrots and cockatoos. Why do we refer to &is f o m of copying bebaviow as n r t i ~ c nand the copykg behaviours of h m a n s and other apes as Starion! T%e latter is considered to involve higher cognirion and to be an aspect of consciousness, whereas mimicry is thiought to be ~ c c u m h gautomatically wi&out self-awareness, But how do we make this disrincEion in real terms? As a human baby develops awareness of itself does it shift from to hitadon? Very young babies copy the smile of adults, pa~cularlythe mocher, and we call this i ~ t a t i m ,but perhaps it is reauy mimicq, On the other hand, we do not know that lyre bkds, magpies and Famats are using lesser cog~tiveprocesses vvhen h e y copy sounds, particular& during the learning phase when they are scquirjng the abiliry to do so. There must be differem foms of copying behaviour, some betrer refened to as imitaoion and otfiers as mhicry, but the present use of these separate terms is in reality detemined by the attimdes of avian biologists versus primatologists and by our expectations of the species in q e s ~ o n .
Awmeness and c Awareness of self and oehers may atso be a part of urtication. When a yomg chick is distressed, it e ~ t s peep calls that amact the hen. 1s the chick aware of the fact &at it is sending messages to the ben? It d1;5ht simply produce calls as a read-out or by-product of internat processes, like a machine, not even being aware of feeling discontent, let alone behg aware that it is co with the hen. That is, the co unication may not be intenGonal. The same questions may be asked of a human baby when it cries for its moxher, Being aware of the vocalisaGons that we make is s o m e ~ n gthat devefaps with age. The same may be m e for rhe chick. There is some evidence, aftkough not cornpie@ enough for us to be sure, that adult chickens m_tty commmicate intentionally and therefore be aware of the fact that they are c o m m ~ c a ~ n gBefore . discussing .this 31 must say sorne.thing about the calls that chickens use to communiicate, Peter Marlet., at the University af CaEfofia in Davis, USA, and Chris Evans, now at Macquarie U ~ v e r s i vin Aus~tsalia, discovered that roosters e h t alam calls when. they see a predator, such as a hawk frying overhead or even an h a g e of a hawk an a videoscreen overhead, but do so ortly when hey have an audience of ather members of their species, The alam call made in response to seeing an aerial predator is very dgferent from the call made in response to a predator on the ground, such as a dog or raccoon. The a e ~ a lalarm call is a long screech, whereas -the ground alarm call is a s e ~ e sof short pulses of sound, The presence or absence of an. audience does not iduence the ~ o u n dalarm call, ApparenQy, as Marler and Evan~ suggest, the call is as much directed at the predator$ in an anernpt to scare it away, as to other chickens. The calls have specificiw that can, be interpreted by o&er members of the species and, indeed, chickens respond appropriately by crouching and looking up when they hear the a e ~ a l
D5 OF THEIR O W
alam call or by m f i n g for cover or s m h g when, they hear the ground predator slam call. The csllfs of chickens are quite specific, relaying idormation that can be interpreted camecdy by other chickens, and h e c d s are e & ~ e d only in specific contexrs. 'This would suggest &at &ey are not simply produced hpulsively and involuntady, as many people have believed, &so, they ape nor simply a read-out of the bird" sssarce. of emotion e m i ~ e din any context$ a l ~ o u g hernorion may still have a role in their producGon. The ques~an.relevam ta awareness is whe&er the chicken ma&g the call h o w s &at it is sen&ng the message. Om could a r a e , as maniy have, that the chicken is prog ed to emit i t e alarm call only if a conspecific (ana&er chicken) is present and thus there is no htenrional c One way of discover;ing wheher a~analsco inten~onauyis to see whe&er they use a call wi& a specific m e a ~ n gin an musual context in, order to deceive ano.t%rer anhal, Gyger and MarXer have reportced some evidence .that chickens d g h t use caUs to deceive. fn the presence of food, chickens e d t a 'food call' and this amacts other chickens to the food site, The researchers repofled incidences in which a rooster issued the food catl in the absence of food to deceive a hen into approachhg, This example wilJ be discussed later in more dema mder the topic of deception. Vewer mo&eys (or green modeys) also give alam calls when an audience is present, Seyfad a d Cheney have fomd &at vemet xrrodeys produce hfkrent calls in response to seeing ufereat predators, such as leopards, eagles or snakes. The call given when they see a leopard is a barking sound. When they see an eagle they emit a single cough-like sound, and when they see a snake they c h u ~ e r .Each OE tftese alam caats elicits the approp~ate f o m of defence by cheir canspecifics. If one m o k e y sees a sn&e ancl calls "nake-in, vemet-mo&eyese, the arkers stand erect on their kind h b s and peer into the tau grass, whereas the c 4 "leopard' sends &em scurrying up the
AWMESNESS OF SELF A m OTHERS
nearest m e and the kaglekaIlt causes them to look up and take cover. The mokeys ceaaidy seem to be respondhg as if Zihey know the meaning of the c a b T o add hrther weight to this inte:preta:ation, the researchers rested the mo&eys using a. me&od of habimation-ashabimarcioxz that tests speech percepdon ;ifl h w a n idants. They chase two social contact calls, a wrr wgch is given when the modeys spot anoher poup of m~&eys and a chutler wKch is e d a e d in aggressive encounters bemeen groups. Thus borh calls are associated w i h goups of mo&eys even though they sound very different, Fkst, a subject was exposed repeatedy to the chulgr of axlober indi.vidual until it no longer responded to the call (i.e. it bad kabimated to &is cafi). Then Ehe wrr call of the same individual was played. The test subject did not respond (i.e, it did not dishabituate), It treated borh c&s as if they were now the same, havhg s o m e ~ n gto do with a group of mokeys that could not be seen and wzeh were now bekg ignored. Given &at Ehe ww sounds very dzferem from the chulter, the test subject must have been h t e v r e ~ n athe acmd meaning of the calls raher an. 'mindcssly' respandhg to their acous~c content. Both calls referred to the same social sirnation and habimadon occwed shul.faneouslly to b o a , By contrast, ent was repeated usim two calk that refer ontexts (e.g. the leopard and eagle alam cds), habima~onto one of the calls did not ~ a n s f e rto the other, n e s e results indicate &at the some hm of seman~c,represenr%rional c vvhieh is a f ~ s rstep towards lanwage, afthough human lanmage ixzvotves much more than referen.tial rela~ons b e ~ e e nwords and objects or events.. The paint of interest here is whe&er they are a w m of the meaning of the communication or merely act a u t ~ m tfy in f4ighly specific contexts. Unfomnately, these exp nts cannot answer this ques~ondisectly. The mo&eys may be aware of the meat~ngbut: not necessar2y. Mso, is the mokey that is maEng Ellarm calls aware of the state of bowledge of the other mo&eys in its troop?
MINDS OF THEIR O W
Cheney and S e $ a ~ say that it is not3 because it will conhue to give alam calls Iang after everyone in the troop has seen ehe predator. I would suggest that this may not be a simanion in which even h m a n s would take cog~sance of the mind state of others. In life-tkrreatexl;ing situations mast of us tend to focus in, on, our sumival saate&es; ody same excepbanal individuals act aImisbcaHy and show awareness of others. Under i nem attack from a predator the vewet nnokey may focus arten~anand alarm call but not take into account the behaviour of the other woop members. This simaGon. does not appear to be one on wfich to base general concl-ustons about the abiliv of modeys to be aware of the state of bowledge of o&ers, Cheney and Seyfa& have tested macaque mo&eys in the laboratorqi and reached the same conclusion that they did for the wild ones: that they are unaware af the state of hawledge of oaers. They hvesdgated whe&er a mo&er responds differendy when her offsp~ngis imorant of a sima~oncompared to when it bows about it. One situation, involved raishg the alarm when a technician approached wi& a net, used to capmre the mode-ys, and the o&er involved calling to hdicate the presence of food. The fist situadon. m i ~ c k e dthe approach of a predator in the wild and, not uxlexpeete&y, the m o ~ e gave r the same rtype and number sf calls k e s p e c ~ v eof wheher her offspsing h e w about the predator or nor CdiFferent naohers and their offspring were tested), The same resdt was cibtained for signaUjng about hod. The mother called to signal the presence of food. imspec~veof whetker the infant knew or did not h o w &at food was there, It could be that testing the mott.lerk behaviour when food is given is free from the problenz of focusscd artenfion uader stress for sunrival, but the mOnkcys could have been so hungry that they were just as stressed in the test with food as they were in the test with the predator, tlrdomxrately, the researchers men~onednorh;ing about this and they did not measure any ather behaviows h a t nzight indicate the level of suress. Cheney and Seyfareh have concluded &at monkeys
AWAWNESS QF SElP AND OTHERS
are unaware of the mind sate of otlher mo&eys even tbough the monkeys are asmte observers of the behaviour of o&ers and b o w the social relaGonshilps in the troop. 1 would interpret heir results with more circumspecLion because the teseing situations were or rnay have been arousing and suresslill, tlze kind of sirnations in which even humans might not pay a a e n ~ o nto the mind state of others.
Teaching may be a mariuifesmdon of the abiliw to assess the mental state of anoher. It involves a c ~ v epa&cipadon in clzangng the behaviow of another, T"he teacher must recodse the dzference bemeen his or her own state nf howiedge and that of the individual needing to be taught* There are reports of anjrnals t e a c ~ n ganother member of 'cheir species. Christophe Boesch has observed that mober chimpamees in tbe w3d samet-irnes teach their offspring how ta crack open nuts. Chimpamees crack the nuts by placing &em on a rack or tree root, as an anva, and then s ~ b them g with a ha er stone (discussed chapter 3). A mo&er pedorms this act more slowlty when her offspring is looking. Bsesch also obsemed a morfner re-pasi~onher hfant" nut on the anv2 so that it could be cracked more easdy., It appears that the ma.t_E.rernot only taught the idant but also did so inten~snauy,a c ~ wi& g an understanding of the infant" specific lack sf a b i l i ~ , Many primatologisrs use this example as evidence of men&i-state attribu.tion, m e a ~ n gthat tfie mo&er was able to a ~ b u r eignorance to her oEsphng, As DaGd bremaek says, the motEzer has a W e o sf ~ mind" rnay well be so, but was the ms-fher acmally aware af the infant" mental ignorance or the infant's physical (sul) ignorance? The mocher might have had no understanding of why the idant was behaving in a parfidatr way and acted with the inten~onof changing the fnEant% behaviow, not its state of bowledge. This would be a less sophiseiicatcd form of a t ~ b u ~ obut r r it would be amibution neve&eless.
The chimpamee Washoe, who learnt to c using h e r i c a n Sign Lanwszge, was @ven an idant chimpanzee to raise after her own baby died. She was absemed, on several occasions, mouldkg the hands of the idant, Loulis, into signs. Washae had been taught to sign by humans who sometrimes moulded her hands and, agparenrly, she was using the s m e teachkg mehod fisr Loulis, Seyfafi and Cheney have reported -that rnofher vervet mokeys do m t appear to comect their young when they make kappropfiate responses on hearing the various alarm taus: for example, sanding up to look at the ground when &ey hear the alarm call "eagle" T h e mothers do not appear to encourage infants that have responded comecdy to an: alarm call and they do not appear to pmish &ose &at have responded inconecdy. The mo&ers do not appear CO be aware of the stakes of their offsip~ng.Mtemati.vely, they are aware of their infants' &stakes but they da not correct &em. Udomnately, these is too littie idormacion on. teaching als available to allow us to decide whet2ter teaching urnan. species involves awareness sf the mental sate of anoher or whether shpler processes are being used. Some would a r p e that the absence of many examples of teaching indicates r it occurs only rarely in anhals, as opposed to the co on occunenee of teaching in humans, but X do nor agree witJ1 this. Field e.tlhologsts tend to see what they are l o o ~ n gfor and they overlook the behaviours that they have not &ought about. This coulid be the case for teaching in animals because it has only quite recenzlly become a topic of debate.
The abiliw to h o w what axlatl?er individual mi&t be thinking or what another inditridual believes is an i m p o ~ a n t aspect of awareness in hwnans. We can e s b a c e and contempla~ethe state of rnind of anoIher individual. This abiliry is some~mesreferred to as aPcribuhon of mental
AWmEHESS OF SEXP AND OTmRS
states to o&ers or as having a &eory of mind, As mendoned previously, here is evidence that children can a ~ b u r e mental states to o&ers by the drne that they arc two or three years old. How da our closest relarjives, the apes, perfom on rash shilar to those given to human children? The primatolo@sts Prernack and Woodmff tested a chirnpamee on a task &at might indicae this ability to read anoher" mind state, The chimpanzee was shown a series of videotaped scenes of a h m a n actor smg@ing to solve a n m b e r of problems, such as reaching for a bunch of bananas or get-ting out: of a locked cage. As well as seeing the videotape, the chimpanzee was given a s e ~ e sof photographs, one aE wkch showed a solurion to the problem, For example, a slick was jincluded for the banana problem and a key for the cage problem, The c chose the correct photograph to solve each problem, suggesting that she understood the actor's ppuqose, but she did this only when the actor in the video~pewas her favourite ~ainet.,m e n the actor was one &at she did not like, she chose an inconeet photograph. It appears &at: she was intending to deceive the &sliked ~ a i n e rbut, alternar;ively, it is possible that she only a~endedfdly to the task when her favourite trainer appea More convincing evidence that t.r;ibute mental states to a&ers comes horn the smdies of Daniel PovixleG, at the Mew Iberia Research Center in Los hgeles, USA, and colleapes. Chhpamees were required to a&but:e the menu1 states of 'hower' and "guesserQo each of ~o humans. The chimpamees were plresented wi& four cups, one of which was baited with food. The hower was the person who had baited the cup in the presence of the ckimpamee being rested but w i ~ o u tthe chhpstnzee being able to see which cup was actually baited. The guesser ei&er waited outside the room while the cups were being baited or stood in the room with a bag over his head. At tesfing the hower pointed to the baited cup, whereas the wesser pointed to any CUP at random, The chjmpamees were able to learn to act an the advice of the hower ra&er
MINDS OF T H E E O W
than the guesser, a result that the researchers interpreted as showing that chimpamees are capable of modelling the visual perspectives of o&ers. These soas of experiments provide convincixlg evidence &ar: chimpamees are aware af the sQte of mind of orher individuals, and in these cases &at they h e w the state of nAnd of humans. It wodd now be interesdng to see if oaer species can do &ewise, alaouglh the mamer in which they are tested would have to be adapted to meet the requirements of each padcdar species. Povinelli and colleapes have tested rhesus macaqxne mokeys in a tesdw sirnation very similar to that used for the chimpamees and the results showed that h e y were unable to learn who was the kower' and who was the "esser'. Rarhrer than being a faifure of macaque ma&eys, as compared ~& chhpanzees, m a ~ b u t emental states, this result codd have been due to species differences in a~enhon,or in social behaviour, or on h e past experience of the particular aniirnals tested, o f hese factors &at may influence pedormnce on the task need to be considered before making any general statement about the ab%w of a species.
Social interaczions are likely to be more complex in species that can, e m p a ~ i s eand keadheah o&er7s s n d s because awareness of &e mental state of orhers would provide a powerfd means by ulhich to predict their behaviour. Social interac~ons would &erefore be based our predic?tions or bypo&eses, rafier &an b e b ediate responses to sima ~ a n sas tkitey occur. The abi-li~to assess the mental state of orhas and to predict tfileir behaviour would also lay the basis for beiw able to deceive another inrentionally; that is, to mislead anotficrtr into believing some&irrg that is incosrect. First let me give some anecdotal examples that might involve the use of cognidve processes for deception. Two monkeys were engaged in a fight; m e moved away and
AWmENESS OF SELF AND OTHERS
the olfier s~etchedout her hand as in a peace-mahg, contaa gesture but, when the other mankey responded by t a ~ n ghold of the ourstretched hand, the first mo&ey grabbed hold of her and attacked again. Was the gesmrc ma& with the imenrion to deceive? h altemadve explanarion might be that, at the moment &at the mo&ey put out her hand to make the gesmre, she was mo~vatedto signal reconciliation but, when the other monkey approached and made contact, she switched to aggression. WKch is the more parsimonious explanaeon for the behavsr say the l a ~ e rbut3 were we to iour? A b e h a ~ o ~ would subsrimte humans into &is interaclr;ion, few would question that it was an act of decep~on.I want to point out that the. interpreaGon of the behaviour that we will accept as being m e depends on whe&er we believe that the species invofved is capable of Sgher levels of cogni~oni and s species cansciousness, It is a matier of our a ~ ~ d itoe the in. quesdon, Qn tbe other hand, the fact that this pahcular behavioual sequence is obsemed camoh in. itself, be used to prove the efistence of hi&er co@~onand consciousness in the species in quesrion, There are many clever tit.xings that animals can do that do not require explanations based on h-igher cogrubon. Let me give anorher example. 1 feed my three dogs toge&er and one eats faster than the o&ers. Having f ~ s h e d her bowl of food, on occasions, she will bark and run towards the gate as if.' someone were cornhg. The other W O dogs foEow and she dashes back to eat the food &are &ey have leA. It seems to me h a t she has played this wick too often to get away with it any more but it is, in fact, &at repedrsion that makes me more convinced &at it may be an inten~onalact af deception and not her own mistaken response to a sound at the gate or simply chance. There are two o&er aspeca of the behaviour hait lead me to deduce that it is deeepdon usulg Egher cog~tion:she would not hasten back to the food bowls before the oher dogs if she had genuinely perceived that someone was at the gate, and she runs back to the food before she reaches the
gate, leaving the otker dogs chargng to the gate alone, Not only has she managed to get the oher dogs to leave &eir food but also she has e o n ~ v e dto make them fully occupied at the gate while she consumes the food &at they have left. Of course, deceprion can occw ody so long as the o&ers are not aware of her fdse alarm and, if she repeats it too ofien, rSlley wL i E learn evenmally. They w a become aware of her inten~onto deceive (see chapter 3). 'This is l&ely to be why reports of beha~ourh a t appear to hvolve decept.ion are reta~velyrare. "Ile difficul-try is d i s c o v e ~ ~ acts that, al&ou& rare enough to deceive, are repeated enough not to be merely chance. Xe must be m e &at the more intelligent a species is, the fewer h e s a padcular f o m of deception can. be repeated without it be& detected as a Uljick. It fouows, &mefore, that it might be harder to find convincing, repeatable evidence of deceptive behaviour in species &at are more lkely to use higher cog~Cionto deceive, ho&ez; s b d a r example of "crying wolf' has been seen in the Arceic fox, h addt fox. managed to steal a piece of food from a young one by issuing w a r ~ n gcalls, on which s i p d the yomg fox dropped the morriel and ran off into the rocks, The adult then ate mhe food. This was repeared sever& Cirnes on different days. Nor are such examples conlitned to Mum has obsemed what: he describes a iour in mu species of flycacbing birds (the bluish-slate antsh&e and the w~te-wingedsh&e tanger) that he has sn~diedfor several years in the h a z m rainforest. These birds tea$ flocks of ed species as h e y move &rough rhe raidoresr: canapy, a c ~ as g sentinds by ghing alam calls when bird-eating hau.ks are in their vicinity. In remn, they feed on insects flushed out by the foraging of the rest of the flock. When an insect has been flushed out by a bird of the other species, the sentinel species joins in the chase to catch it. hltum has obsemed that, d u ~ n gthe chase, these sentinels use the predator alarm call. He believes h a t they use it falsely to distract the other bird, even though
A W m E M S S OF SELF AND OTHERS
ody sligh*, hereby g a h h g an advanmge for capmfing tfie prey, The 'falsehalls were ~ v e nin the absence of a hawk and d u ~ n gchases, not when on sen..finel du@. It is possible, however, &at the bkds e ~ atam t calls when rkey are higMy aroused, either on seeing a predator or d u k g the food chase. That is, &et al calls may be shply a not intentional decepread-out of the state of arousal on. hespectjve of the causation, the outcome for the aycatcher would be the same, an. advantage in obtairzhg food, But one inte~retaeioninvolves cogheion, whereas the o ~ e does r not. As evidence against the interpretarion that the bird is shply e m i ~ n gthe slam call as an outcome of behg kgMy aroused, M m n reports &at the calls are no when the bkds are s e a r c h g fos prey alone. &is evidence is not eanclusive because it is &at the bird% state of arousal is higher d e n g compe6hve chases than when it is foraghg alone, By measurhg heart rate or oher physiological responses to stlress the answer to this ~ g h bet dete ned, but this would be very diffidt to do in wild species, and it has not yet been done, I have menhoned previously the rooster" use of the food call to amact a hen. Gyger and Mader have presented some evidence, ailaough not comprehensive enough, that indcates that the rooster is m ely to use this tactic away, Accordkg to of decep.ciion when the ben is .these researchers, virhen food is a c m d y present, the rooster is more likely to give a food call when a hen is nearby, reporting honesrly to his audience &at food is present, When food is absent and the rooster gi food cstll to deceive, the hen. is more l&ety to be away. "Ilfie reason for rhis might be &at chealing will have a suecessEuX outcome sdy if the lie is not detected, If the hen were close by, she would be more likely to see that no food is present and rberefore not approach. Mareover, cheaters mi@r even be punished or, at least, ignored. We h o w from the experiments of PovineUi and colleagues, discussed
MNDS OF THEIR O m
previausly, that chimpamees can learn to ignore a cheater. I suspect &at this a b i l i ~occurs in many oher species, Sornehes anhals remain silent in candir.ions in wkch they would usually emit calls. For example, many species of birds and rna als have been sbsesved to emit food calls when a source of food has been discovered, and &us oher members of the species ga&er in the same spot to feed. In some species, there are aecasions when an in&viduat does not call on fmding food. Xs this intenfonal deceprion, gerfomed t the food does not have to be fa2ed to calf far some other shared, ar has the a. g pahcularly h m m or not reason, such as not prefeming the type of food found? It is difficult to el the altema~veexplanafions for wimalding infoma h often cited case of decep~orris the "broken-wing display' of the sound-neshg plover. When a hawk flies overhead, the n e s h g plo~cler runs away f a m her nest clraggng one wing in a dramaric display f&gning h j q , This disaaets the hawvs attention from the nest, as the predator is more a e l y to amck an irmjured bird. As soon as the predator swoops down, the plover flies away. Some a r p e &at this is inteneional decepfon, whereas o&ers prefer to desc~bethe behaviour as an unconscious response given to the signal %awk near nest".There are more detags to cornider. To make the displaiy the plover moves to a locadon close to where the predator is moving rather &an where it was first sighted. m g e carryixzg out The brokenwing &splay, the plover also looks around to manitor the predator" bbeaviotlr and varies the pattern of the display to amact the predator. If the predator is not paying a~en.tion, the glover may approach and display more intenfly. Thus, the behaviour is not fixed ar invariant, sugges~ngthat the behaviour is not a totally automatic " red by the sight of a predator. Moreover, in res using h m a n s as paten;fial predators, plovers m learnt the individual charactesisrics of humans who had looked at the nest when approaching and they displayed more to them &an to humans who had walked past without
looking at tke nest, The beha.u.rour is by no means simple but it codd be programmed by a set of rules. T"he plover's behaviour is defmitely very clever but we cannot tell whe.r;her it involves higher cog~rtionor is governed by a relatively t however, that the plover simple set of d e s . We ~ g h note, appears to be able to fofEow fhe eye gaze of the predator, because it displays more when a human predator looks at the nest, AS discussed previously, in humans and o&er prhates such eye-gaze following is considered to indicate self-awareness. There are many anecdotal repofls of deception in n their Ftdd smdies witf"l baboons, Rchard Byme primates. X and h d r e w Whiten have observed deceptive t a c ~ c sused to obtain food from a dominant anhal. A yomg baboon came across an adult about to eat a corm &at he had dug from &c gourrd, an ac~vir;ythat the young one may nor have been able to do itself, The young one screamed loudly and its m o ~ e came r m g aggessively towards the adult with the c a m , He dropped the c a m and ran off with .the: moffier in hot pursuit, and the yomg one proceeded to eat the corm. The researchers said &at &ere was no doubt that the mother befieved &at her offspring had k e n hurt. This may be so, but it is difficuft to b o w whehet. the young one actually used the scream deceptively. It might have screamed in fmsmtisn and the outcome may have been fornitas. The researchers did say that the same individual was observed to use t h i s tacde three h e s in several weeks, which might suggest intentionally but does not prove it. 'There are many morc: examples in the scien~ficliterature and more are sure to be added now that deception has become a much discussed topic. My opinion is that we do not yet have sufficient evidence that would prove that any of these acts are imeacionaf deceplion based an cognilion. Higher menml processes may, indeed, be necessary far s m e of the examplcs &at I have discussed; the problem is where to draw the fine. We are inclined to accept chat deceprive acts performed by pxtimates involve
coeition, and are inten&orral, but; I would arwe &at the same may also be the case for some of the decep~ve behaTaiour of birds and of other naxrp~mate his book The Thinki;12g Ape %chard Byme comidve decepdon is largely codned to a w &at~ domesfic cats and dogs use decepdon frequendy but he tbi&s that this results from ~ e i interaceion r with humans. Repofis of deception in wild nonprimate rna are rare* X wauld like to suggest &at this apparent rafiw may be s h p l y a bias inwoduced by the main researchers w o r h g in tbe field. Given &at g closer to humam, field workers ~ g h be t m bo& to look for decep.t.ive behavioum and to nodce &em when they do occur because they are more stm3ar to the End af taceics that we might use owselves. h o&er words, the hplied evolu~onof decepeion, and wirh it intefigence, in B p e " cctah may The d i f f i c d ~irr e any of .tkrese repofis of decepe-ion as evidence and awareness of orbers is that, d&augb behavioural acts of decepgo rarely to deceive, deceptcion itself is not unc in lower species of anhals. Many brighdy pattemd insects, for exmple butterflies and caterpillars, ~~c the appearance of poisonous rdatcives so that they. can ward off predators (birds) even &ough &ey are not &ernselves poisonous, 'This is dcceprive ously it does nor involve cognition. T o make the disdnclian b e ~ e e nthis knd of decep~vennihcmy. and deception h a t uses social manipulaltion, the .tern cacticat demption is used to refer to cbe latter, Again, h e r e does one draw the line bemeexl one kind of decept-_ionand ana&er? Ofher species may use vocal mhicry deceptively to ward off predators or intruders encroaching upon their tenitory. Vocal rnixnicry uses brain mechanisms but maybe nor comiticiun, since cogniaion requires higher processes that are not axrtomadc, f: do not wish to imply that vocal is not cognitive or that it is not intentional decepdon but I do wish to stress that, as yet, we do not h o w . The issue at
AWmENESS OF SELF mP) OTHERS
e but when and haw to smke may be not the a b a q to tfy h different conteas, do it. Is it used creatively and di or is it merely the sound equkdent: of the visual bu~eraies,@ven off autornaticaay just as the bighdy coiloured b u ~ e d i e sward off predatom? At present, we have no mswers, X will discuss this Izu&er h chapter 6,
htentionality is p h f i n g ahead, anbcipa~ng the fumre. ately, anoher ambipous tern. Behaviow may appear to be h t e planned purpose but the a ~ m a l need rzot be conscious of the pl als will go out in search of food at only those h e s of the day when. it is avaitable. Some species of bats, for example, wake up at dusk and go to catch irzsects, and they do this at a set time, At the h e &at they are awake~ng,they may have no fihoughts of any plan to search for insects. They may s h p l y wake accordkg to an lixzternal dock (refened to as a biolo@cd clock) and tfien go to feed automa~caEy, If so, their behaviow may appear to be inten~ond,but no awareness or consciousness mderlies it. They may s h p l y be behaeng like c l o c b ~ r kas~ Descafles daimed. Of cowse, the bats m y be conscious of their inten~onsbut mere obsewa~onof their behaviour will not tell us hat. As I have just discussed, reacKng and decep~onappear to the obsewer as intenhand beha~ours,but this observadon atone carnot prove that they are conscious behaviows. There has to be a plan to change another" bbeaviom or to ~ c itkpurpasehHy. That is, we rniQht say &at the teacher or deceiver must have a %isionkof ttze fume. Maliinl;r a roal to be used for abtaining food may require plaming ahead, but. not necessarily. C h p a m e e s and orang-mm are h o w n to Fashion tools for terPnite %shingY (tool using will be discussed h d e r in c they are fashio~ngthe tools, are &ese a
S OF' THEIR QW
the use to which &ey will put the tool? My in~rieianteUs me that they are, but merely observing &em engaged in this behaviour does not provide an arrswer to this ques~on, Many species of rodents and birds store food in spring for fumre use in cke winter. This seems like pre-eminent planning for a purpose but it may simply be unconscious behaviow ~ g g e r e dby a biological clock, If I had to guess, f would be inclined to say &at most examples of food storage may not involve conscious interrtion, but that ma%ng a tool for a specific purpose may well be conscious, Unfomnately, here is no evidence &at alows me to h o w wt-rich of my supposi~onsis correct. Hun.ting by sral%ng grey may, perhaps, involve intentional p l a ~ r z gahead. It requires an~cipat_ionand p l a ~ x l g to intercept the prey. h h a l s ckat can predict the behaviour of their prey more accurately will be more efficient huters. The abii1il.y t s ~ n d - r e a danoher species is required to . . se h u n ~ n gsuccess. Dependhg on the species, this might be a more diffidt task than reading the minds of members of one's sown species. Awareness of other members of one" own species may be a direct extension of selfawareness.. Awareness of the mental state of another species requires at rhe very least a ~rslnslationaf that abilic~ito deal with the pec&arjties of the orher species, Of course, it may be possible to design a sophisricated maehine that can h n t dawn cefiain species, but the htent observation of the prey and momerrt-to-moment adjusment of behaviour seen, for example, in lions huaring down zebra that they have singled out from llhc pack is complex behaviour that does not appear to be automatic. Perhaps it could be described by eeaain mjes and perhaps the hunters foDow these uneonsciously, but I do not happen to believe that this is the case.. This is nrty belief2 others are e n ~ d e dto &eh% For species that hunt in packs (e.g. dogs and even chimpanzees), efficient hunting requires group co-operation and it may require mind-reading of the group members as well as of The prey. This is an exwemely complex prctwss. When chimpamees set out to hunt down anozher p
AWARENESS OF SELF AND OTHERS
to kill it for food, ~ e appear y to be doing so ~hktent. They use inregraced strateg-ies to corner their prey that cannot be completely preprogra These s~ategiesare certaidy clever, if not cansciou same appears to he the case in wad dogs, who stalk and their prey in groups. These highly social behaviours appear to be planned ahead (i.e. intendanal) and we wodd defktely say that they were so were we obsewing the same behaviour in humans. T o prove that it is rhe case in a ~ m a l sis far from shple. Again the problem of tanwage intervenes: we can ask humans about their iixlten-t_ionsbut &is channel of understanding mental processes is not avaifabie for a I have no hesi~donin saykg that group hundng looks like it hvolves conscious, inten~onalbehaviom but, m f ~ m nately, that does not prove &at it does. However, it is not plausible to aacount for soplzisdeated and flegbte behaviour in terns of s~mtalus-responserelationships carried out an a moment-to-moment basis. Some of the acdons of bo& humans and arrimals in these sima~iionsmight occur as a result of rapid decisions without figher, conscious processes (e.g. a c c o r h g to simple rules, such. as do B if A happens, and so on) but decisions about: what, where and when to hunt and how to solicit and matnt-ain group cohesion for the hunt are l&ety to involve higher mental processes and, probably, comciousness,
I began this chapter eussing feehng in and nly accepted &at can said &at it is now feel physical pain in on them. Provided that it is w i ~ i nthe capaciq of a species for individuals to empathise wi& each oher, a given individual may anotliler's suffering, Thus, provided &at: a are aware af the physical, emo~onaland mind smks it is passible for one a al to suffer because it observes pain being idieted on. anoher a ~ m a l .The suffe~xlrgin this case would be emoeional ra&er than physical pain.
Most s c i e n ~ swar~ in hborato~estake little or no account of this possibig~.I have often seen biochefists and n e w o s c i e n ~ sM~ h g rats while sheis cagemates watch. It may aho be ttze case &at individuals are aware of the emotional s@tes of ohelrs. That is, one h&viduaf, ma;y suffer by bekg aware that anottzer hditi-idual is suffe~ng in ways orher than physical pain. There will be more discussion of this in chapter 7. There may be no single behaviour, yet, hown, that concf,usively proves that at the least some a sdf-awareness or awareness af others, have htenrianality or can amibute mental states to ohers, but oweran we have indications &at &is is the case.
Some years ago I had a blkd dog, She anived from England at my house in Auswalia Elfready blind and the fist obstacle she had to nego~atewas a fight of stairs leadhg up from the from door. She learnt to make her way up 'ehe stairs by mna3ing her snout across the ~ d of each stair before stepping on it. This became a corngletely srcyfised or stereo~pedbehaviow. One day, however, she stood at rhe b o ~ o mof the stairs, not f o u o ~ n gas I called from the top, and she remained &ere mo~odess,as if ca2culadng sornehing. Then she suddedy took off up the stairs at a rapid pace with her head held Cgh, wi&out measu~ngeach step that she took. From that h e on she always used this new s e a t e e to c l h b those stairs, altfcIotxgh the measut-Ing approach was used to negoriate oher unfamiliar stairs. On that day when she changed h e saratea she had gained insight into the problem, Insight is a f o m of problem solving that has been associated vvitb higher intelligence, and it was once &ought to be ~ q u to e humans. It is an aspect of intelligence and &us, h mm, it has been associated with awareness or consciousness, A number of behavioms or cog~riveab~Gesrelated to inteBigence have been associated with awareness and consciousness. h addirion to problem solving and insi&t, these are versa&i~,the abiliq to categorise objecrts and evems, the ab%v to f o m concepB or d e s and the a b i l i ~to farm menal representaltions of objects and evens. Some of ehese
h
ab%.ties are related to each ofher and all of them re@ on al% sbilify to f o m meano~es,1 will discuss each in turn.
d with the abiliw for complex cognition is said to be intelligent. In chapter 1 it was mentioned that cognition and inteagence shodd not be confused. Gognirion refers to &ose processes in the brain that use higher i n f o m a ~ o n processhg. M ~ o u g he o g ~ h o nand intelligence are liked, it might be h e ~ e rto resewe use of the tern 'iinrelligent-o refer to the behavhur that is generated by frigher cogni~ve processes, and &us dshneish it from the tern eog&rion. 1x1 other words, complex c o g ~ i o ngives rise to inteuigent behaviour. In solving a complex. problem, lior example, cognifive processes vvol-rld be involved in finding the solution, and the behaviom that occurs as a result of solving the prabkm. would be htelligent, But, what do we really mean by ilnteuigent behaviour! Not all behaviour &at appears to be inteaigent to the absemes uses highm copitlion, himals, including hmans, may exhibit such beha~ourwithout it being a reflec~onof rheir inreitigence. One might c& this clever behavisur racher &an in~fiigentbehaviour. Having made this distindm beween intenigence and cognition, I must point out h a t the terms are not always used in this way, Many people use the tern Ynteuigent-to desersibe an. individual rarher &an a padcular behaviour. If m individual is kxefligent" how does this show in his or her behaviolxr? At &is stage we have reached a major conaoversy. Psychologists uy to narrow down h m a n intelligence by measuring the Intelligence Quotient (IQ) of individuals, m e r e are a number of IQ tests, all of wzch are in the quesrion, and answer format. IQ, however, may have little bearing on probkm. solving or 'intelligence?in the world at large, There arc, in fact, sufficient problems
m N T K WAGES, MEMORY AND
with measuring inrelligence in humans to make us ex~emely w a v of applying the tern to animals, als the tern inteuigence fn most pub1lical;ions about n. In fact, both terns is used interchangeably with c are used h such a way that their meaning remains rather vape. I have to make it quite clear &at, alhough the tern inteuigeace is often used with reference to arrimals, and is so used in this book, there is no accepted, precise defini~on for it, Like consciousness it is a tern that carnot be defined in a unitary way, It would be pahdess to come up with t to measure in some batiery of tests that ~ @ aEempt als the eq~valerrtof IQ in h m a n s because a species vary so much in heir senses, heir manner of processing infornabon, and so on. We do, however, recognise h a t an animal with a greater c o g ~ d v ecapaciw is more l&ely to display ixtreuigeslt behavl.o.ur and more l&ely to have consciousness an one with a smaller c o g ~ d v e cagaciw. When r e f e r ~ gto h w a a s , usually we apply the single tern 5nteEgenceVa a dkerse set of ac~viides &at we assme are coneouedt by a common set of cogiGve processes, There is, In fact, no evidence &at this is the case*F u d e m a r e , there is no ewidence that different species use the same cognitive processes to taw out s W a r qpes of behaviour. As a geaeraf mlc, we consider anhals that are more like us as being more inrelligent, but it is impoaant to recog~se.chat each species is adapted tu its parlicular envkonmentd niche and pedoms 'intelligt.ndy3 inthat niche. If we think of intelligence in this way, it is pointless to classify one species as more inteuigcnt than anoher. This seems a reasonable posi-tion to take, One could say that there are many different 'intelligences', rather than ranking all species on &c same scde of intelligence. Some species that may appear to be less intelligent than others when they are all rested on the same, rather arbi~arilychosen task (e.g. going around a banier to reach s o m e ~ i n gon the other side) may perfom very "intelligently' an tasks better
suited to &eir own specialised ab2i~es.It wodd be beaer to see hteEgence in tems of the e n ~ r erepenoire of the behaviour of a species and in the abiliry of the species to establish new rdationships and m solve novel sima~onsbut, udomnately, we have liae idomahon about the bread& of the potedal behavioural repertoire of maay species, T o move from intelligence to consciousness, it is assumed that consciousness comes about only when a ceaain level of intelligence is reached, that is, when a certain level of cog~tivecomplexity is reached. Not all species can be conscious, or conscious in the same way, even though evev one may be pedecdy adapted to p e ~ o r mintegigendy in its own niche. The issue then is when and in what species did cogfi~vecomplexji~or hteuigence reach a level at wkch consciousness could emerge! The marter is complex because, by and large, increasing complegv is seen as followkg a linear or hierarchical path, As animals evolved their brains and their behaviour may have become more complex, but evslueon has not occuned exacdy in a linear fashion. The evoIutianary tree has branches at which one line branched from another, For example, repeles evolved from amphibians and both bkds als from rep~les.We see Ihe mammalian. h e as the m& of the tree, because evenmafly it led to humans, and birds as bekg an. a side branch of the m&, Bkds went along their own separate path of evalu~onand, as we shal see later, they developed cogni~ve and intelligence of a b d &fferent from that of Instead of seeing the branrshes of the tree of evolu~onas lesser &an the &ese days some of us prefer to refer to an evoluGamf5r vine, rather than a tree, in order to recodse the &fferences beween species but nor to place -them in. a hierarchy. Differem ?intell_igenees%ave arisen, on different branches of the vine, many ~ m e sover. Has cmsc;.iattsness asisen once only s r more than once on &Eerem branches of the e v o l u ~ o m qvine? Birds, for example, with their different complex cognitive capacities may have evolved consciousness quite independently of
M E N T a MAGES, MEMORY AND MTELLIGEMCE
als. X f so, would &eir consciousness be the same as als or quite different? Like inteilligence, consciousness might: differ according to the species and its environmental niche, As with intelligence, we fight overlook aose foms of consciousness that are too different from our own. X have raised rhese paints only to show &at this "kg" we call consciousness, like the " h g h e call intelligence, is udikely to be uniary or fixed. There may be ceflain. enviroments that are mare likely &an others to bfing out inteltigence and consciousness of a cenain kind, According to Mison Jolly of Rockfeuer U ~ v e r s i v ,USA, and Nicholas Humphrey of Cambfidge U~versify, USA, the greater intelligence of higher prhates evolved ta deal with the problems of social life, It would be only in social life (be &is social life wiain the same species or b e ~ e e nspecies) that decepdon could occur and tke abiiiw to predict the behaviour of olhers would be pa~crxlarly beneficial (see chapter 2). Thus, social inteuigence, and consciousness, be used for social marriprxla~on.Humpbrey argues that social intdfigence is used also far shared howledge of the habitat and of techniques used for findjng food, building nests, and so on, and for transmission of learnt infarmadon (culwe), He says that, wih increasing b e spent on social aclivirjes, the members of a species have less lime ta spend on orher subsistence, nonsocial behaviours. 'They must therefore become more eEcient in pedarming &ese latter activities, and this adds to the htellecmal demand, Wi& social and nonsocial demands for incrrased intelligence, a saovvbding effect occms and the e w h ~ o naf intelligence gets exaa impetus. Mthou& intefesting, this hypo&esis is not watertight. Social complexity might well provide a powerful demand for intelligence and, evenmally, consciousness but, based on the research that my colleague Gisela Kaplan and I have done ant orang-utans, I do not think h i s is a complete explana~on.Qraag-mans are s o l i ~ r yapes compared with chimpanzees and goriflas but rhey are not less
inteKgerm. There is a saying that, if you give a screw&ver pamee, it will ~ o itwout of the cage; give it to a gor21a and it .rill scratch itself; give it to an orang-utan and it wal use it to unscrew the cage and escape. Cefiaidy, in tasks requiring any f o m of maxlipula-rion orang-utans excel. This might be merely anecdaal evidence but et.en Hmphrey has remarked that orang-utans do not f5t his hypo&esis. Higher inteuigence ~ g h be t demanded by envkoments that r e q ~ emuch decision makrrg and f e a ~ n gof the sMls for susvival. It has been suggested that wild orang-utans use a large amount of rheir cogni~ve capaciq to negadate their way &rough the canopy. Wi& such heaw bodies they must be canstandy assessing w%ch boughs can support their weight, rand an accurate decision. on &is maser would depend on much learnhg about the strenm and subdeness of boughs. Thus, life style, social s r a&emise, may demand inteUigence and perhaps consciousness too.
Versaairy is an aspect of intelligence. Biologists tend to use the tern adap&bil;ity to mean the same thing as versatili~, Some species are specialists, able to live in a narrow range of con&~onsand eat a narrow range of food, whereas olhers are more adaptable, being capable of adapting ta many diBerent conditions and food types. Humans are highly adaptable as we have spread to a d r i c u d e of different enviroments in all parts of the world, but so too hwe many insects, such as cockraachcs. Adaptabilit~idoes g -to do with intelligence, but not necessarif-y have an intdigence may assist sarne ferns of behavioural adapmbility, W m m s have managed to ihabit i&ospitable regions of the earth by using their ktelligence to consmct shelters, make clo&es, obtain food, and so on, Here our m e n ~ l abilides have pemined verszl&i@ or adap-tacion. Adaptability is a concept that is only tenuously related to intelligence, but it is a tern that has come into greater use
in relarion to arrifrcial intelligence as well as the imlIigence of anlmals, Hence the need to discuss it here, AdaptabiXiv may be a characterisrjc applied to an individual or the individuals wiehin a species. Gsella Kaplan (of the Universiq of New England) and I have been inclined to say that the incelligencc: of orang-mns is manifested in their abiti~yto adapt to clifferent enviroments, kis discussed in chapter 2, orang-utans in rehabilitarion centres adapt to interac~ons with b a n s by using their tools and idtaring their behaviour, This is well hewn to labourers vvorgng in rehabifita~on cenaes for orang-utans; as menrioned previously the orangutans m y %help' by takng the shovel to dig the garden, and the paint-brush to pdnt the walls, the floor and perhaps thc; roof, and they take the saw to aaempt to lrrutate sawing wood. Adaptabaity applies to Individuals &at can sohe campXex problems and may be able to plan ahead. Adaptabgiw is also appfied to the evolu~onof a species as it adapts to a chandng envko enr, Some scienrists, such as jonahan Schull of the deparmem of P s y c h o l o ~ at Havedord College, USA, say that this means that species are 'ineefigent'. He suggests that biologicd species and intelligent als have much in CO on in &eir a b s ~ e sto adapt to their respective enviroments and in how they interact with oher species or indiividuals, respee~vefy.In this sense all species from ants to apes are %nteEgen.t\s long as they are adapted to their enviroment, This very broad use of the tern 3nteagenceYs en~relysqarate from intelligence generated by hi&er copiive processes, It is, eref fore, not useful in our discussions of intelligence related to cmplex cog~rionand consciousness, but it is important to keep it in mhd.
The ab2itrgi to solve problems is considered to be an aspea of inrelligence in both humans and animals. There are mny ways to solve problems, The shplest one is by trial and
MNDS OF THEIR
am
error, in which evev possible srcsatea is ~ e atd random and the soludon. to the problem is found by chance. This approach does not necessarily requke ~ g h e rc o g ~ ~ v e processes, al&ough they may be involved, The mast soplzjs-ficated way of solvhg a problem is to use insight, In this ease the subject hi& about the problem and uses prior howledge of a different situa~on,to come to a solu~on wifiout wing out any oher ways of deaIing with the problem, m e n we have such an insight, we say that the solu~an.kame h a flashbaxzd we feel a sense of pleasure (somebmes refemed to as an, 'ah ha-feeling). Some people fi* h a t iinsight is one of the k p o a a n t characteri_sdcs that separates humans b r n other ri~mals.Et is difficxaft to design expe ents that would prove beyond doubt &at an a is not, capable of insight: but 1: beGeve that many resewchers ratker too hasGly a s s m e that problem solving by an_imals is imitabon, ra&er &arm hsight It is true that &ere are vem few repolrted examples that might kdicate insigkrt in. axzbals, but we should d to be an aspect of remember &at irzsight is c learning and the field of in axllhals has been dominated by " e a ~ n l ; psychologists study the kind of iearaing &at results when a pal-cicular response is rewarded (c,g, by gving a food reward) or punished (e.g. by applying an elec~icshock). Far elrample, a rat can be ~ a i n e dto press a bar when a light comes on by rewarding it with a pe1let of Eood each rime it presses the bar. At first, it presses the bar simply because it is sorne.ch.ing to da and it does not h a w that: it is associated wi& food but? after many eririls (of pressing the bar and bkng rewarded with food), it will learn to associate bar pressing with hod, This is cstled condihoned learning. The same sort of uaining procedures are used ainers: in this case the a ~ m a lis ng a particular antic. Other sorts of learning that do not require any obvious reward or punishment have been largely ignored by experimental psychologists. Another example of learning with no obvious
M E N T m IMCES, MEMORY M D INTEUIGENCE
reward is i m p r i a ~ g a, powerful form of learning by young chicks and ducks, as well as by other species that are barn in a relatively advanced state of development. By t!ae process of irnprinring they learn to recognise their morber and so foflow her. Imprineiag learning has been largely ignored by experixnenai psychologis@ but not by ehologists, who recogflise it as a special f o m of learning essential for sunrival of the species. hsight learning$ Xike impheng, is e a ~ e bout wi&out food reward or punishment and it requires contemplation that may not be encouraged by most laboratory t e s ~ gsimadons. 'X'here are some repofled examples of insigh learning te desc~besthe fouovving sequence suggesting insight in a young orang-awn. The orilng-ultan was given a tong rod which codd be insefled into a aansparent plas.ric tube to reach a sweet and push it out. The orang-utan h e w what: tlhe sweet; was but he did not h o w how to use the rod as a tool to obtain it, At first he bit the tube and tried unsuccessfdy to insert: the tool. He then moved away and sat d a m , apparendy in fmsr-ratian as he began to gerfom stereofyped (repe.ri~sus)behaviours with the tool and bladet. Then. he glanced back at the tube and, apparenfly, at &is moment the insight came to him, He got up, waked over to the mbe earwing the rod, insened it into the tube and obtained the sweet. M ~ o u g h he was, of coune, rewarded by eaeng the sweet, this was ody at the end of the sequence and his solutim to the problem did nor have to be condi.rioned by @ving him lots of rewards during the learnhg of the task, Instead, the problem appeared to be solved in a Bash of insight. Experience of playing with objects may provide the basis for insight. A c ~ m p a m e ethat has played with boxes of various sizes is more l&ely to show insight in sacking the boxes, smaller ones on top af the larger ones, to make a tower to e h b up so 'that it can reach a bunch. of bananas Eran&n.g from the roof of its cage, h o & e r possible example of ixlsi&t learnkg may have i~tiated the washing of sweet IpoQtoes in, the sea by
Japanese macawe mo&eys, which they do before they eat t%lem. On the island of Koshima the m a c a w s are fed by people who dump sweet potatoes, wheat and o&er hod scuffs on the sand. Many years ago ehe scienlists worGng with these macaques noticed that one of &em was raking her potatoes .ts the water and washing the sand off before she ate Chem, En time, olher members of the m o p adopted the same behaviour, eieher because hey h h t e d the first nrrodey or because they discovered the b&avitiour independenay, Here we are interested in the f ~ s tmo&ey9s discovery of wasKng potatoes. If she came across it by chance, shply because she happened to go into the water when she had a potato in her hand and &en dropped it, the acquisition of this new behaviour woufd not refieet any remarkable a b g i ~to solve the problem of removing &e sand f"rom the food. If2 howevers she h e w that water codd be used to wash. &inns or pafis of her body and then she applied this howledge to the potato problem, she would have used insight. Witkout detailed observat-ion of the ini~al. pedommance of t h i s interesting behaviour, 1 am afraid we camot decide wEch af ~ e s eexplanatrioxzs is more &ely. But we do h o w that Xater the same mo&ey began to wash wheat in. the water and that: this practice also spread ~ o u g h the tsroop, This second discovery ~ g h suggest t that this pahcular nnokey has supexlior insigh abdiw, because it is ud&eXy &at: the same mo&ey woccld haw learnt mice by chance, unless she bats some o&er peculiariv of behaviour which, say, takes her to the water mare often. &an. the alher mo&eys in the troop. However, a tkird of h e @oop of mo&eys were also going to the water to wash &eir potatoes by the time wheat washing was discovered by only one modey, and &at was the same one that had discovered potato washing, In an. aEerrzpt to observe the processes of l e a r ~ n gthat may lead prhates to wash fhek food, Elisaberta tiisalbcrg~ of rhe Ins~mto& Psicolagist in Rome, Italy, and DorotJlly Fragaszy af the University of Georgia, USA, gave sandcovered food to groups of capuehins sou^ American
M E N T L IMGES, MEMORY
WP) NTKLIGENGE
mokeys) and crab-eating macaques, These modeys had water in eheir enclosures and the macaques were used to standhg and playing in it, The capuchhs were more hesitant about the water at first but later they played in it. Most of the macaques soon learnt to wash their sandy food before eadng it but it appeared ehat they learnt to do so ra-t%lerby accident as they took food with &em when they ran to the water to play. The capuchins behaved differendy. At first they sampled the sandy food and, finding it distastefd, .tried to rub off the sand, Vev soon (k&in the fist six one of the capucfins began ta wash the food in water before eating it and the researchers said &at he appeared to do this "deberately" He would take a piece sf sandy fmit from a basin, go to the water to wash i& eat the fmit: and then repeat the sequence, He also inspected each piece of fmit after it had been dtrked in the water and washed it agah if alE of the sand had not been removed. It is ra&er d & e l y for this behaviour to have appeal-ed purely by chance. hsight leardng for a deliberate p q o s e seems more likely, The o&er four eapuchins in the same group acquired the behaviour later on and thus it is unlikely that they did sa by insight. They may have ~ t a t e dthe fist capuchin" behaviour, but a repeat experiment on a larger g o u p of capuchins found that only same of the subjects learnt to wash ~ e i food, r Depending on the social group and past experience of the mhals, food washing may spread at different rates &rough. the group, Regardless of this, in both groups of capuchins there was one individual or a few individuals who ra&er rapidly showed the behaviour af washing the food, and these few may have acquired the behaviour by use of insight with a plan in mind, The crab-eating macaques, on the other hand, rnay have acquired the same behauiom by the chance association of food and water in play. But, given that laboratory living and other social factors in the group rnay intluence the behaviour, I would be reluctant: to say chat these differences are charactelristic aE the species and I would be equally reluctant to apply these results to the potato washing of the wild Japanese macaques, Neve&eless, these
observations do point out rhe varie~ry of ways in which modeys can learn and the compleifies involved in ixlterpre&g exacdy what processes are going on. Now P would like to consider some other forms of learning &at show how clever a als can be, 1 have meneioned how rats can be con$ieioned to press at bar for a food reward. Using a shilar procedure, pigeons can. be eained to peck a key h r a food reward. Pisons can also be tsained to peck at a key with a pardcular colour and r (e.g. peck a red k y for a food avoid one of a n o ~ e colour reward and avoid a green key, because pecks at geen are either not rewarded or are punished), and they can be ~ a k e dto peck at a key that has a parrieular parrern displayed on it and avoid one with another paEttern. They can. also be &ained vr~i& three keys, eaeh with a paftem displayed on it. m e cenwe key provides no reward ar pu~shmentif it is pecked, and on, it is a paftern &at is marched by a paEerrz on one of the side keys. The key on tfie orber side has a different paaem an it, The pigeon has to feam to peck the side key with the m a t c h g paEem to get a food reward, The side key on wfich the matching pattern occurs is changed randomly beween the left and right sides on eaeh peeking trial so that they pigeon. does not learn. s b p l y to peck zlhe key on, say, the left ratber &an the parrem. This is h o w n as a matching-to-sample task, Once tsained in this way, the pigeon can be tested It mrns out h r its a b i f i ~to solve a v a ~ of e problem, ~ that pigeons are remarkably good at solving very camplex problems ushg these visual displays on the k y s . Using this metlhod, Juan Delius of the Univemiq of Boehum, Germany, has shown that pigeons have an astounding abgity to perform rnentnl rotation problems of the type included in hrelligence tests for humans, The pigeons were first trained to match-to-sample an abswact shape presented on the central key (Fig. 3.1). One of the rest paMems was identical to the sample and the other was its minor-hage, Pecks at the matching sfimdus were rewarded with food, whereas pecks at the mirror-hage were
GEf, MEMORY
WL) WT"ELL1GEMCE
Fig. 3.1 A pigeon has an excellent ability to recognise symbols rotated at different angles. The pigeon has to peck the key (left or right) that matches the pattern displayed on the central key The problem is similar to the standard ratation problem (at the bottsm af the figure) of an intelligence test for humans Source: Adapted from Delius, 198'7,
MND$ OF m E I R OWN
p u ~ s h e dby a brief period of darhess, In e a i ~ n g several , different shapes were presented all at the same angje of orientation. In testing, the pigeons were presented vvi& shapes rotated at various an@es rela~veto the sample. n e y were able to perfom the task just as accurately and as rapidy as before. In fact, here was no decline in &eir ab2iw to pedorm the task when the paEemS were rotated. H m a n s tested on the same task ( t a u c ~ n gra&er than pecking the keys) showed a sig~ficantdeclhe in accuracy when the panems were rotatied and they also took longer to make a decision about wEch key to touch. Delius said &at the pigeons were g e ~ u s e sin comparison with the hrlnans! Of course, &is may mean &at pigeons solve the problem using quite a &fferent coweive swatem3 possibly related to their experience of l o o b g down on objects in. a horizontal @ane and thus wirh no prefened angle of orientaaion, bu"eeir strategy is clearly not an S e ~ o once r
Pigeons f u d e r austrate &eir higMy developed e o g ~ ~ v e capacities by being able ta f o m percepfual concepts, such as those r e q ~ r e dto r e c o ~ s edifferent forms of Bees, leaves, persons, water or fish in different contexts, Delius traiaed pigeons to peck at any key thxt had wacer an it regardless of wbe&er the water was a droplet nn a leaf, a lake, a glass of water, and so on. They were able to pedom this task, accordirtg to Delius, by concept of 'water-recognisable in aU of these different forms and comexts, They ccruld do the same for trees of diffierent kinds, as well as people and so on. Pigeons can even use the absmct concep of 'sphericiq', as determined by conditioning &em far pecking at solid, ~ e e - d b e n s i a n a l objects, such as pebbles, bolts, pearls and buttons, instead of pecking at keys. The threedbensional ohjects were presented on a series of metal plates anached to an automated system that moved them &rough the cage as the pigeon pecked. Each pigeon was
PVIENTm IWCES, MEMORY AND It4T
presented at any one time with three objects on keys, either W O spherical objects and one nonspherical or one spherical and WO nonsphericd. It: received a food reward far peckiag spherical objects and no reward was given when it pecked nonsphelical ones. Presented wi& eighteen objects of each type, the pigeons learnt: to perfom the task wiehin remarkabXy few uials. They were then testcd to see whe&er they had acquired the concept of %spherici~y"by presenting them with over one hundred novel sphe~ealand nonspherical objects. 'T"hey were able to generalise to the novel objeca, recognising them accarding to &e abseact characteristic of %phericir;v7,just as do humans, and they couJd even judge sphe~cimin phot-ographs of the objects. Pigeons can also acqujre a perceg~lal concept of s p m e q , an abiliw that is said to underlie the expression of art by humans. Delius showed &at they can learn to to oher qpes of s.timuG that they have not seen before. They form an abs~act:concept: of %sy There is also evidence that pigeons are able problems by using abseact rules, such as 'od&v2 or &fferexzce in terns of the shape of s b u l i , They can learn to detect the odd s h u l u s in, a group and generalise the a b s ~ a c trule learnt to ather m e s af s h u l i . The same abigq to pedom od&q learning has been shown in prhates, dolphins a n d members of the crow f a d y , Categorisatlion and concept fomadon have been shown in a v e q special parrot, named &ex. h e x has been trained by lrene Pepperberg of the Universi~of Plrizona, USA, ro use English words to name abje~tsand feelings, He can use a vacabdary like &at of the sign-lanmage-aained chimpanzees and he can iden~fy,request or refuse more than one hundfed objects of " colows, shapes and texmres. For example, the ex ter may show Alex a green wooden block and ask What colour2band T h a t shape?" and he can. answer each quesdan comecdy. He also expresses desires (such as want peanut' or Come here".
"
Mexk aabifiw to categor?ise or see the rela.t;isnskp beween objectr; can be tested by presen2ing him with different objects and asbng him to say whefier they are the "same' or "different" For example, he mi&t be shown a Hue wooden square and a blue paper sqmre and, when asked "at3 same?', be replies %Blzrebartd, when asked 'What's different?" he replies "Shape'". C b p a n z e e s have been tested on sim2ar tasks and &ex pedoms as well as rhey do. The concept of sameidifferent is an atzs~actone, as arbiwary symbols must be c o n s m c ~ dto represea rhe reladonships b e ~ e e nobjects. Therefore, it relies on higher c o d ~ v eprocesses, and we can say that Mex e ~ b i t s intelligent behaviour. His behaGour is a h o s t cefiaidy more &an merely clever, and this is a conencing way to demonsware it in the laboratory. To in the wild, ' als must rely on web develope cities to cate items, be that foods versus nodood or f a d a r songs of o&er birds vemus udamiliar ones and the a b i l i ~to recogise same versus afferent would dso be bpoa-tant in social co using voeafisa.t;ions. h n z a l s must also be able quantity. h-must be within the capabili~esof must species rcs recognise more versus less (e.g. more foad versus less), but we h o w &at at least some species can count, Nex can couat up to six. m e n asked bow many o b j e c ~&ere are on a tray, he can say the number with an 8CCUl^SLCyof about 80 per cent, He has a concept of ambers. It is interesting chat Pepperberg has rep~rtedNex's pedormance with up to only Six Objects because swen seems to be a " Is as well as ty, USA2 and akeacfy, tested the versus less' dsts presented on the keys of a conditioning box. They could disrinmish one dot from two with 80 per cent accuracy and m o from three and so on up to seven from eight, with decreasing accuracy as the numbers increased. In fact, at seven versus eight their accuracy had dropped to chance
levels, They cmld not make this discrhinafioa. The same drop in perlbmance has been found in other species and even in humans rested on exacdy the same task as the pigeons. Afrhougfi the pigeons could be couneing the number of dots on each key and h e n comparing &em, and D e h s hi&that this is unlikely in this sort eM, Rarher, the pigeon may look at the array of dots on, one key and remember &at brieny while it compares it with the array of dots on the otIrer key. That is, they may form hternaf represena~onsof the visualt imges on the keys. Whatever strategy is being used, Lhe pigeon can make abstsact discrintinations based on n u e r icd quanti'Eies, Primaus can do l&ewise and Sarah Boysen of Ohio Stare Universiq, USA, has demom~ated&at a chimpamee called Sheba can carv out same algebraic calculabons, such as simple addition, using the h a b i c symbols of nmbers which, we use.
Pigeons must have an extensive memory to perfom the tasb already menGaned and on some tasks their memories rival those of hmarrs. Van Fersen, and GGntBrkQn mined pigeons to resnemba hundreds of differexll: paEems projected onto the keys of a condi~oningbox. The pigeons were rewarded with food far peckng one hundred different paaems, and they had to disc bate em from over six hundred other paaems that provided no reward when pecked, This discriminadon is extremely difficult for humans, hut the pigeons could learn to do it with great: accuracy and retained the mernov for it with an 88 per cent accuracy after seven mon&s. This is remarkable. Pigeons can also remember &at they ham seen up m 320 slides of ( h w a n ) holiday scenes after a delay period of two years. Defius begeves that they may achieve this astaunding feat of memory by coding or fabelling the idamation, possibly in mueh the same way that humans do so by using descrip~vewords. Q&er researchem, however,
DS OF THEIR OWN
d a b ahat the pigeons must use raOher simple mecha~sms to make ~ e s eenormously complex Gsual classifications, ation will be necessary to find out the expianabon d e ~ a c t sfrom the hpressive memory and discshination abiti~esof the pigeon. Birds that store their food (parid and comid species) also display remarkable memories, John Qebs of Oxford Urriversi~, m, has shown that European marsh-rtits can rerfieve rheir stored caches accurately at a large n u b e r o f sites days after they have stored &ern. Some species in very cold clhates even remember where their many caches n until the following spring-and are located from au they st0ll.e several hundreds sf seeds over a period of just a few weeks. X have deliberatdy chosen examples of memory capacity in birds because, w.fil quite recendy, this aspect of birds has been rahes ignored. "Ilere is considerable evidence hait o&er species form many, complex memories that persist over b e , The much stated adage that Tlcphrznts newer forget-is consistent witl.r experheaM findings, but elephants are not Kkely to be done in having this chmacteristic. ~Vanyreaders wdl be familiar w i the ~ fact that heir pet dag or panot may take a like or clislike to m e of their friends and remember that pahcular person even after very long periods of absence, For most specim, havkg a long memory is a maser of sumival. Orang-utans, for example, remember d e r e their favourite f m i h g trees are located and when the fmif ripens, as they. remm to pahcular trees at just the right time at each f m i h g season, Such behaviour is wpicd of many species. OOrhers can find their m y year in and ymr out over enomous distances, ftollowhg remembered paths. These are specialised skills that certainly rely on cognition and detailed memories, In fact, the need to forage for food is considered to be a drivhg force for increasing the cognitive complexity (or cognitive capacity) of the brain. On &is basis, some people a r p e Chat undates (horses, cows, sheep, and so on) have had no pressure to evolve
higher cognirive powers because they do not have to go out in search of food in the same way that species wi& more specialised diets must, The implication is that u n e late8 are less htelligent than many other m w o M suggest that such beliefs are based on inadeqwte understanding of the cogni-tive abilities of ungulates. Furthemore, m@ates do not simply eat evev blade of @ass that they come across. 'They select favourite gasses and may even go in search of &ern, It has also been hygo&esised &at the apes &at stayed in the trees e a k g fruit experienced no evolu~sxzarypressure to evolve Kgher cag~.tionand Char it was the descent of our amestors from the .trees and their shift in diet hvolvhg hunhng for food that fed to the evofu~onof h o ~ t l i d s(the line of evolurion to modern hmatls)., X will discuss this more in, chapter 5, O&er mennosy abigGes rnust be applied to social. sima.eions, In chapter 2, I men~onedhpfinGng in young chjicks. The chick learns lihe feamres of the hen ancl also of its siblings, and it remembem these for a very long h e , possibly far the rest of its life. At first it foms a mernozy. af the hen and foil2ows her when she moves away from the nest. Ilt also learns to recogkse its siblings and can tell fiern apart from oher chick. Later it becomes sexuagy i m p r h ~ don, the hen and this deternines its preference for a mate in later life. It is hese stable and gowedul memories &at direct. its sociaf behaviour, Chickens, when yomg and a d u l ~rnust remember their posirions in the sociaf hierarchy (the p e c ~ n gorder) and to do this they must recopise o&er members of their social group so that they can behave appropriately when they encounter &ern, None of these memories are shple. For example, the hen must be recognised by her math visual features as well as her vocdisahons and the way she moves, Her srnelI may be impodant also, as it is h o w n &at eficks hprint on. certain odours. m e hen, must be recognised in &fferent environments (that is, she must he recag~sedagainst a changing background of visual bag-es, somds and smefls), These
MWBS OF THEIR O m
memories are recorded in the ehick"s brah and &ey must be, as it were, wdaen down according to some sort of ckroglolo@;ieal sequence that becomes a u ~ q u eautobiography of each ixldividud chick. Shilar memories are used by all anhais as a basis for their social behaGaw. As 1: have rneaeiovled earlier in &is chapter, some g ologists believe &at social: behaviour n a q pressure to increase c o m i ~ v e sophistication and, eventually, led to self-awareness. M.Ehough &is hypofiesis may have some v&diw, it should not: be limited t:u the primates. kill too frequendy prirrzatologists and some psychologsts ignore the fact that many ofher species of Is have complex social organisa~ons equivalent to rl-ro primates. It can. be said that, for all alian and avian species, the larger a social group is, the more complex the memo~esthat each individual must hold and the more often those memories have to be updated. Overall, the memoq ab%.fies of animals do not differ from those of humans. The memories of anhals can. be detded and exaernely stable., They can also be updated and they are essenGd for sumival, It is possible that species, and individuals too, have rnernolrlies that vary in their richness and &at this is dhecrly related to their cognitive capac*, but we have yet m cfiscover this. Although the ability to form memories is a aneasure of cleverness or inteltigence, it does not necessarily prove the existence of consciousaess, Memo~esmay be used to direct behaviour wrirhout the anha1 behg conscious of them, just as a computer stores memories that direct the way it functions. We can. recall our memories when we wish, outside of any direct context related to the particular memory. They ur consciousness and we can contemplate &ern. Is do the same thing? According to Merlin Queen's Univenity, Canada, they cannot. He believes that even apes are unable to r e d memories in&pend.encly of uiggers in the i @diate enviroment, That is, Donald believes that they cannot recall memories
at their will and c a out ~ independent .though. f consider this to be a particularly prejudiced position to take, given our inabaiq m access what an animal is rhinEng h o u g h use of language, h fact, Koks, a goriXla taught ta cornmunieate using sign tanwage, does communicate how she felt in past siicuacions (e.g. she expresses sadness when asked to recan her feeling abuul: a lost compa~on,as vr;llt be discussed f u d e r in chapters 6 and 7)).Of course, it could be said that this response was ~Criggeredby being asked the question, but we do m t have access to rimes when sfic might have similar recall of her feelings wilXlout hcjng prompted. Does she perhaps express her private rhuughts in sim lanaage? Even if she does nor, &at would not prove that she does not have private ~ o u g h t sbecause, after all, we would rarely speak aloud our private &ougf-rts, In the absence of evidence, people like Donald, who categorically state that all a ~ m a l sare locked into ~ a n about g ediate enviroment, are and responding to ody the , not scien~ficevidence. expresskg their a ~ m d e to s a
The h m a n mind foms internal representations af objects and events. These representa~snstake on a presence in , use &em as a basis for communica.tion by the ~ n d We fanwage and to make symbolic art ffoms, also used in cornmunicadon. A sculpn~re or a pain~ng rnay be the physical manifesration of the artist's internal represema~on. This does not mean &at here is an eatact p i c ~ ein the mind, Mental hages are elusive, invisible and have na objective existence like television &ages, pain~ngs,photomapbs. M e n ~ images l do rely on ceflain physical. processes in the brain, the activiry of neurons, but hey carnot be explained directly by the b s w n physical processes of the brah. We also form mental images of sounds, smells and rhe feel of objects, and so on,They are parc of memory, y also be hauuciimagination and dreams and ~ e rnay narions. Even though we are able fs describe visud images
&at we have in ~ n and d have a sense of acwauy seeing &em 'in the ~ n d % eye" ,ey are subjec~veand cannot be pimed down into any physical form, Mentd regresenta~onsare an aspect of consciousness and &ey may be the basis on which symbolism and art developed. n e e&ologist frenaus Eibel-EibesfeldtJ at the Max Blanck h s ~ m t ein Gemany, considers &at certain aspecLs of the percep~on,of art as aes&et_;caxe based on sensov processes &at have a long evalu~on, and are &erefore shaed by many species of animals, but the e humans. I: am not crea~onof art, he believes, is ~ q u 10 swe &at we need to be cilregorical about this. What is m and what is not is dependent on the o b s e ~ e rand that observer" ab%w to read the symbols. The topic of symbol use by humans will be discussed T'he a b i l i ~to form and use mental regresenta~onsmust require a higMy developed comitive absity, but the ques'fion of when the ab%v evolved remins open, There is etkidence that it evolved much earlier &an an&ropologists seem to accept. Of cowse, humans may be ~ q u ine the way that they use mental images in communica~orz,but it is udgely that we are alone in our abifiv to form representa~onsof objee~.
M e n u h a g e s of hidden objects When we are s e a r c b g for sometXling &at we have lost, we are able to %isualise%e object in. the mind, The mental represenauloa of rhe lost object becomes paramount in our minds so that we may overlook o&er objeca that we encounter during our search, We are said to have formed a searclzi~ginzage. Human infants of less than eight monehs of age will not search far objects bidden from them,The famous psychologist Piaget said that they have not yet developed "object constancy'". Objecl: consmncy is said to indicate the abiliw to fom a mental represmafion and, surprishgly, even young chicks appear to be able to do this. Giorgio Vallortigara of the
University of Udine in Italy has tested young chicks on tasks in TNbich chey have to go around a bavrier in order to get close to an object on which they have imprinted. Each chick was raised with a red t a b l e - t e ~ sball hanging in the cage so that it imprinted on that instead of on the mother hen, Once h p ~ t e d a, chick will always approach or follow the imprin~ngobject sa that it remains close to it, It veatS the object as if i t were a social pamer. The chick becomes distlressed when it is unable to be near the imprinting object. Thus, a chick imprinted on a red ball wodd foHow after the bag and go around barriers to get to it. Vallortigara tesled the cfiick"s abiliry to fam a m e n ~ l represen~*cionof the red ball by putting the chick inside a smag cage with tlransparent walls and placed inside a l a w circular arena (Fig. 3.2). From its cage the chick could see two screens placed at equal &stances from its posirion, and the red ball on wkich it had imprinted, While the chick watched, the: red ball was moved behind ei&er one of the screens, The chick was held in t.he cage for two or h e e minutes longer and then released into the arena. If it csdd not remember which screen the ball had disappeared beKnd, that is, if it had been unable to form and store a mental representation. of the object going behind or bekg behind, the chick would have approached either screen at random. It did not. AU: of the chicks tested approached the screen beKxld wKch the ball had been hidden. from &eh view, and went around it f'o make conact with the b d . In. ana&er test, the same researcher found that chicks would walk around a short maze of comidors in the correct direc~onto be able to see the red ball rough a srnafl window, As each chick was mabng its way around the cosridors it must have been arienhg itself by using a s p a ~ a l representaeion of where it would find the ball. In other words, the chick was aware of the eltlis-~enceof the ball even though it was not visible to Ehe chick while it was vvafing &rough the maze. In these expeuirnents, the chicks were able to retain the unenal representation for only m o to three
Fig. 3 2 A young chick has been raised with a red ball hanging in its cage and becomes imprinted on it, Here the chick is tested to see whether it can remember which opaque screen hides the ball. The chick is allowed to wlllch as the bait is moved behind one of the screens and a IiiQte later it is released into the arena. The chick approaches the screen hiding the bali and goes around it ta find the ball, (Drawing not to scale,) Source: Experiment by Regolin and Vallofligara, 1995.
CES, MEMORY kQ4D WTELLIGENGE
longer delay periods beween seeing the ball move behind a screen and being released into rhe arena, they approached eiaer screen at random. Therefore, w ~ l echicks can f o m mental representarions, perbaps they are unable to retain them far long periods. This may be a consequence of their young age (adult fowls have not been tested for this ability) or because the species lacks the a"aKv to make long-tern represena~ons. Mental representaxisns are also used to recog~sevisual objects when ody a part of tile object can be seen, Most objects in the world are opaque and thus we camot see all of an object at once, The front hides the back, and other o b j e c ~get in front of the one that we might want to see, and so on. Humans have no problem with this: we do not perceive only tile separate Eramem of the object but recogni;se the whole object when we can see ody parts of it, We generate a mental representation of the nonvisible pans of tbe crbjecr, 'This abiliq would seem to be cridcal for all living species because prey as well as other members of the species are often only pady visible, being sbscmed by bushes or oher barriers. Lucia Regofin of the U ~ v e r s i ~ of Padua, Italy, and Valiortigara have shown recently that yowg ckicks that have been imphated on. a, red cardboard ~ianglefa NO-drmensional coloured angle cut-out placed in the cage) can recogxlise this ~ianglewhen it has a black bar korxgh trhe middle of it (Fig. 3.3). 'They @eat it as a pady obscured aiangle and will approach it .in preference to a ~ianglewith no ~ d d secdon e in. tke region fiat would have been obscwed by the bar (i.e. fragments of the triangle that wodd be acmally visible on ei&er side of the bar). By showing different combinaeions of the angle and the bar, Regolin and ValEolrtigara have been able to demorrstsrate &at tke chicks are able ta recogkse h e angle when it appears to be pady hidden behind ano&er object, the bar. T h e chicks could complete the mental h a g e of &e triangle when it was pady occftrded, m e chickJ it w ~ d dseem, possesses abifi~esto r e c o e s e pal-fiaHy occluded objects very s i d a r 'EO the abili~esof humans. h fact, it mi&t be
Fig. 3.3 A chick is raised in the presence of a triangular shape (A) m which it imprints, When tested with a choice beRhteen the triangle partly hidden by a black bar {B) and a triangle with the region covered by the bar missing (C) and also with the bar over the top or on each side of the triangle, the chick approaches the partly hidden triangle (B). This resuiit shows that the chick is able to recognise an object when it sees oniy part of it Source: Adapted from Regolin and Vallortigara, 1995.
said that the Yisual capabilities of birds rival those of prhates, However, mice can also connplere mental images in the same way. Therefore, alrhough this was once *ought
IMENTU IMGES, MEMORY AS.$D WTELLIGENCE
to be an ability unique to humans, it appears to be widespread amongst anha1 species and to have evofved v e v early. New& born h m a n babies are unable to recognise pady ocduded objects, By the age of four mon&s they can tell &at a parcly hidden object is, in fact, a whole, singe object as long as there is s i d a r movement of both of rhe visible parts (e.g. a dog behind a m e mnk that is s h a h g borh its head and tail), but at this age they carnot recog~sea pady hidden stationary object. Only later does this ab2ify develop in humans. One might ask why a young chick c m recogkse partly hidden s m ~ a n a wobjects, whereas young humans camat. A liXrely explasjlation is that chicks are precociaf, s that are akeady quite weEl developed by the dme ey hatch. By con~ast,ehe human, is far less developed at b a , Mental representations may also occur for sow&. As discussed h chapter 2, vervet ma&eys use different cdls to indicate the approach of different predators such as eagles, snakes or leopards, and orher modeys in their g a u p respond in the approp~atemamer to each of the calls, It wodd seem that &ose h e a h g the call have a representarion, or image, of the predator in their " ds'. H e a h g the call snows &ern, as it were, to canjue up the h a g e of the predatnr to wbich the parrieular caU. refers wi&out seeing Lhe tzcmal predator hemselves, There is no evidence that this is, in faclt, 1-he case because rhe xnodeys may be responding to a specific and camplex set of visual and auditou s~muEi,alLhoagh 1 suspect &at this is not so. Tool using
Much irnportanee has been a~ached to tool using in humans and, until quite reeendy, tool using was considered to be a character;is~eexclusive to h m a n s and a haurnark of ous superiori~over a a e r species. Indeed, the earEest evidence of stone-tool using in our ancestors was 2 &lXion years ago. Nmersus examples of tool using by a ~ m a l s
have been rqofied now. The strict d e 5 ~ ~ o ofntool using requires use of a separate object, not part of the user's body (Le, not a be& or a claw) to make an dtera.fion in anoher object. Using a ha to crack open a nut quali5es as this sort of tool u er being the first object, the tod, and the nut being the second object, the one that is changed, As Gh1-istophe Boesch of the Uiversiq of Basel, Swi~zerland,has obsened, wild chhpamees use rocks to crack open, nuts, which they glace on. ano.tller stone &at acts as an anv.2. lit seems &at the ckmpamees understand the funcGon of the hammer and anvil because they piace the nut on the hardest part of the anvil, before it with the hammer. They also vary the mamer of ring accordkg to the qua;Eiv of the nuts. The mees take a raeXler long h e to learn to crack open nuts and, as discussed in, chapter 2, mo&er chinnpaimees have been obsemed t e a c b g their offsp~ng to do so. Learuliing to crack open nu& also occurs by observation of o&ers p e d o r ~ n gthe behaviow and by ffacilitatlion, because the sight kinds of stones for ha ehng and ebr use as anvils are left ttogecker in the place far cr open nuts. Chimpamees also use tools to %sh"e from their nest, In fact, they even f a s ~ o nthe tool that they use, They break off s t a h of @ass or wigs to an ilppropfiate l e n m and then bserl: &em into the holes FP1 a temites9 nest. T h e s gsab hold of the stafk with heir pincers and the chimpanzees pull out the stalk covered in termites, which are &en eaten, This f o m of tool using occms in several differem groups of wifd chimpanzees in Afferent regions, but there are regional variations in tod use. T e r ~ t fishinge is carried nut by chimpanzees in some focalides but not o&ers and the same is m e of nut crac~ng.Each form of rod using is passed on as a c d w e in each of these areas. There has even been a repofl of a chhpanzee using a stick to 'fish' a squirrel out of its hole and then eating it. Several other foms of tool using have been seen in wiki . These include using sponges to obtain water from inaccessible c r a n ~ e sand even us@
MENTAL, IMGES, MEMORY
MP) mmLLIGENCE
a toollrit to get access to honey. Brewer and McGrew reported the case of a chimpanzee that, firsdy, took a large sharp-ended branch and used it to chisel a hole in the wax coating of a beehive. Next it used a smaller and stick for more accurate work on Ehe hole, and fashioned a green branch to about 30 cm in length and used it to puncture the seal over the honey. Finally, it exeacted the honey by dipping a green vine into the hole. So far, there have been fewer reports of wild orangutans using tools, pared with chimpanzees, ;iX&ough tool use is very CQ n in capfive orang-utans. f suspect that this is because there has been far less obsematlion of wild oranputans than there has been oE chimpanzees. SXowever, wild orang-utans in a part of rhe S m a v a n rahforest in hdonesia have been observed to fask.rion a tool to probe into holes in trees, presumbly to extract inseas or sap. 3"ke oraw-u&ns selected a stick from which they s ~ p p e dthe leaves, hen. chewed it at one end and split it r to form a s p a d a shape. The spadate at the s ~ e end end was held in the mouth and the chewed end was trammered into the hole, Nexr the tool was withdrawn from the hole and the chewed end was inseaed in the mou&, Gisela Kaplan and I obsepved a new f o m of tool usjslg in r e h a b a ~ t e dorang-utans in. Sabah, East Malaysia, These orang-utans are fed bananas and o&er fruh on p l a ~ o m s located in cfie jwgle, On. more &an one occasion we n o ~ c e d an orang-utran s p i ~ n ga mctu&fd of chewed banana flesh onto a 3lateWrhat it has fashioned from a a m b e r of leaves, spread like a fan. The orang-utan used the plate at a disance hi& up from the table, after cawing the banana in its mouh to this more secluded spot where it proceeded to eat slowly w i ~ o u tc ~ m p e ~ d ofrom n o&ers, In. cap~viwor o&er forms of contact ~& hmans, orang-utans i ~ t a t ethe way in w%ch h m a n s in their viciniw use tools, as Biseussed in r 2. They also use amees, and clean leaves to sponge up water, as do their teeth and ears with sricks. Gisela &plan and I have observed all of these foms of tool using in rekabiitieated
orang-utans in East Malaysia. Wild orang-utans probably do the same ahings but have not been observed to do so yet. n e r e are other foms of tool using .that: do not fit the strict defirrjtioxl of tool using &at X gave at the b e g n ~ n g of this secdon, but many wodd consider them to be toolr using nevefieless, These include b r e a h g off and &rowing s ~ c k sat inmders, performed by bofh chhpanzees and orang-utans, as well as using leafy branches to fan away insects. Wild orang-utans have been si&ted using leaves to wipe faeces from *eh infants' hairir, Apes in captiviq have shown hemselves to be capable of the h d of tool use h a t has been associated wi& early honninids (ancestors of modern humans). A c a p ~ v ec h h panzee was gven a problem of g e ~ r t gfood from ;a box tied up with s ~ i n g .The chimpanzee fashioned a c u ~ n g ng a hammer stone against a cobblestone, &ereby m a h g sharp Qakes. One of the flakes was then used to cut the s ~ n garound the box. This is clearly sop~sficatedtoof manufacmre and use. The same has been observed in a c a p ~ v eorang-utan and in South h e f i c a n ys. Gapuchins in capGvi@ produced stone rock cores against hard surfaces and then used the Bakes to take the flesh off bones and to eut &rough baniers. Caprive capuchins also manufslcwed tools from bamboo when they were given pieces of bamboo and contahers of sweet symp "cfisrt- codd be reached ei&er by probing a tool into the container or by cutting it. The capuchins manufactured both probing and cutting tools from the bamboo and thus managed to eat the symp. As Chafles Wesrergaard and Stephen Sumi, the researchers who conduaetd these experltnents, pointed out, the toolmaking techniques of the capuchins are analogous to those rhat have been hypothesised for prehistoric homirnids, Of course, the cognitive steps that are involved in tool using must be considered. There might be planned or purposeful use of a tool, or a tool may come to be used purely by chance as all strategies are brought to bear on a problem. Elisabetta Visalberghi of the Institute di
M E N T a MAGES, MEMORY A N D
Fsicologia in Rome, Italy, has sntdied tool-using behaviour in capuchins and claims that, unlike chimpanzees, capuchins do not use mentd abilides to solve the tasks in which rhey use toals. Rather, she claims, they make persistent ~al-and-error (unplanned) attempts ushg a vasiety uf objecls, one of which chances to be a tool that is used to solve the task, Thus, she concludes &at, in coneast to chimpanaees and hmans, capuchins never develop an understanding of the requilremenr-s of the tool asks, However, &is conclusion would not explain the examples of tool m a n u f a c ~ eby capuchins mendoned above. The impoflance of Visalberghi's cmclusion lies in its sepamcion of the cool-ushg behaPr;iour of humans and their closest rela~ves, the chhganzees, from all other species, capuchins being Mew World mokeys that branched off early from the line of evolution &at led to humns. Thus, tool using, once &ought to be the IraUmark of "umamess" is redehed and &er apes nowi6standcan be extended to chkpamee ing-but not beyond them. Tool using by monkeys, according to this posidon, is not the same eking as the planned and considered tool use of chimpamees and hmans, Apes and modeys are, however, not the only animds that use tools, A, sea oner holds a rock to its chest as it floats on its back and uses this as an anvil against wEch to crack open shellfish. Chevalier-Skolnjkof and Liska have found that elephans in a zoo perfom more than menw different kinds of tool use, and nine types have been ~bsemedin wild elephants. Tool using, and even tool manufacmre, also occur in birds. Some species of finches on the Galkpagos Islands use cactzzs spines to probe into crevices in order to h p a l e insects. George MiUhn and Robert Bowmm of San Francisco State College, USA, have conducted a series uf experiments in which they gave eap-t;ivewoodpecker finches from rhe: Galapaws Islands various tools (shorc and long stick, bent and srraight ones) and &fferent manipulabve asks (Fig. 3.4). 'They found &at hungry birds used more tools to probe into crevices to obtain meal woms &an,
MMDS OF THEIR QW
ones that were not hmgrgr. The bird would first try to get the worn k& its beak, and, if it failed to reach. the worn, it wmld take up a tnol to probe for it. "This suggests that t a b g up the tool is a deliberate act with a plan in, but, again, a simpler sfimulus-reward explanadon could also be found to explain the behaviour. The woobpecker h c h e s in bese experbents were also clever enough to pull up a s ~ n hangng g from a perch to obtain a meal worm tied in the at the end of it. They did so by r a ~ n gthe s ~ n g beak and standing on each loop of the string after it had been p d e d up in the beak. In. fact, &ere are a number of species of birds that can e a w out this manipulabve feat, including No& h e r i c a n crows, Very recently, Gavin Hunt of Massey Universiv, New Zealand, repofled b o a manufacture and use of tools by crows to probe for insects, Hunt smctied wild crows in New CaledoMlia, and found that they manufaeme two different Ends of hooked tools to help them capture prey. One kind of tool is made by ehoashg a wig with a hooked end, work;iw wi& the bill on the hook end and then shpping the wig of its leaves and bark. The a&er kind is cut from pandanas leaves, The birds even stored the tools for using again and they appeared to choose the appropriare tool for a particultlr requirement, These two b e h a v i m would requke some foward pla&ng, which is considered to be an aspect of cansciousmss, d&oug;h there .will need to be some welll-designed experiments caded out with the crows to prove that this is really the: ease. Grows are particularly pone ta using tools: the No& h e r i c a o crow W# even learn to use a stick to probe into a hole to gush a key to get a food reward. Tool maEng has also been observed in nurChern blue jays by Thony Jones and Alan Kamil of the University of Massachusetts, USA. The blue jays were seen to rear pieces from the pages of newspapers to use them as tools to rake food peUets that were out of direct reach of the beak in through the wire of their cages so that they could eat them. There are other examples of tool making and use in birds,
GES, MEMORY M D
Fig, 3.4 Woodpecker finches, Cactospiza pal!ida, from t h s GalBpagos islands use sticks as tools 10 probe for meal worms. They also pull up a hanging string with a meal worm tied at the end Soure@:Mitlikan and Bowman, 1967.
but these should seme ta establish that the tool-using b e h a ~ o wof birds is, as far as one can see, as sophis~cated as that of p~maitesand, indeed, ear& h o m ~ d s . Bkds and p~mates in the wild have, so far, been. obsewed to xnandacrure their tools ody from pefishtitbfe mate~als (&e
probing tools of orang-utans and the probing and cuMing tools of crows), but stones are used as tools by wild ehhpamees to crack nuts, by oRers to crack shells and also by birds to crack eggs. Far example, the Empdan wlmre &rows stones at os-u-ich eggs in order to break &em and the black-breasted buzzard of Australia flies up and drops stones onto emu eggs to break &ern. I am not aware that anyone has studied how these egg-breabg beharriuurs are acquired but &ere is eveq possib2iw &at the process is similar to nut cracgng in c panzees. It would appear to be just as sMled, In the case of the p~mates, some researchers have armed for the egstence of parallel evolufion in the Sou& hericzmn capuehins and the apes, That is, tool using is &ought to have arjisen separately in both of rkrese h e s of evolu~on,The ex4stence of tool-using behaviour in birds ~ g h be t taken to suggest a W d line of paraUel: evoludon (i.e, yet anoat-rer independent evolucJlon of tool using), or it may suggest b a t tool-using behaviour was shared by a on ancestor of birds and all of the primates. The common ancestor idea would mean &at tool using appeared very early in evcrtution. The parallel lines of evolution would suggest that tool using is not an unusual acquisidsn. Eiher way, the evidence goes firmly against the posirion that tool using is a special charatcte~sricof humans.
What can we conclude? als are capable of In this chapter we have seen &at a doing alli sorts of complex and clever tf.rings, but perhaps, as the psychologst Niehalas Humplzrey said, they have clever brains but bla& ~ n d s Similarly, , Nicholas Mac%nlash of Cambridge Universi~,UK3 clahs that we are far too inclihed to a ~ b u t eto anrimafs more complex mentd s&tes &an their behaviour acmally wanrants, He acbowledges hotv clever the behaviour of anirnals can be hut prefers not to amibute to animals anythlng like human intelligence, or presumab-ly consciousness.
MEHTrUL MACES, m M O R Y AND INTELLIGENCE
It is m e that, in cemin states of xnind, even. h m a n s may perli>rm complex behaviour Gnrhout being mare of what they are dohg, For example, sleep wakers can. negotiate stairs and even climb on roofs wi&out they are not aware &at they are doing it, nor can hey remember it after &ey wake up. Oher8 speak whole sentences in thek sleep but do nor: h o w that h e y are doing so. "Blind sight' iis ano&er case of behaving wi&our awareness. After extensive injury to the coaex of the brain, same people thi& &at they are bihd, but if they are a s k d to wess where an object is or what it looks fike they can answer conrec2rZy. n e y are able to process the visual information and answer corsecdy wi&out being aware that they have seen anfihing. Is t h i s what the aimals that f have mentioned in t h i s chapter are doing? f &ink not, but many peagte do &i& so. Being intetfigent is clearly a basis for consciousness but it does not prove that consciousness is present.
The brain is made up of nerve cells (called neurons), wEch conduct elecrrieal signatfills and are connected wit31 each o&er to form neural cirmits. There are many dgferent h d s of neurons as well as other cdts, h o w n as gLial cells, Glial cdls p r o ~ d enutririon and smcmral support for the neurons and seme a numbex of o&er dliffcrent hncdons in the brain. This is the material of &e brain, out of which the B must emerge somehow and somewhere. Can we fmd same aspect of brain smcmre or e t e c ~ e a lactjvity of the neurons and their c i r c ~ t sthat might be the material basis of consciousness? Same neurosckn~stsbelieve that this will be possible, whereas ahers (e.g. &E:late Roger S p e w of the G a l i f o ~ ah s ~ m t eof Technolag, USA, ~ f i n in g the 1980s) have arwed that scien~stswill have to look beyond &e material aspects of fie brain in order to mdersmnd consciousness, Even if S p e w is comeet, it remains hpoflant for us to see whetf?er we can explain consciausness and intelligence based on brain s m m r e or some o&er measurable aspects of the cells in the brain. Perhaps conscious tfii&ng occrurs in a p a ~ c d a parr: r of the bra-ain where neurons are arranged in special wqs. Perhaps we can measure some aspect of rhe elecbcal and molecular func.tion, of a neurorz, or of neual ckccuits, essen~alfor consciousness, 'This woufd have to be a prwerty of the neurcrfls &at is present: only in the camcisus s ~ t eand not when the anha1 is sleeping.
FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
There has been a recent renewal of hterest in searching for neural mechanisms of this kind, At clhe 1996 Congress of Psydology hdd in Moneeal, Canada, there w s a sy~lposiumdewored to the neurophysiology of consciousness. Not surprisingly, the neurophysiologists have mrned enal search for these mechar example, Dr R. Llinaus, of the New York U ~ v e r s Medical i~ Cemer, USA, preserated a paper about conscisusness and the physiological propehes of neurons and heir circuifry, and his points by electrspbys. M e r his talk, a member iological recordings fro of the audience asked whe&er he considered &at animals have conscl-iousness, His answer was a &reet affima~ve. Was this a pragrnadc befief to underscore his experimental. req~rementsto work on anhals or one based an assessment of the evidence? He did not elaborate. For tltose more tradirionat tE.li&ers who have resewed consciousness for she human mind, the approach, has been to fmd the explanarisn far consciousness in brain smcmre, Three main aspecqs of the smcmre of the brain have been implicated. The presence of eonsciausness in h m a n s has been amibuted to our larger brain size c o m p a ~ dto aII o a e r species, m the presence of a weLI-developed neocoaex and to the lateralisadon of the brain. I will discuss each of these in mm,
Brain she and evolutiarx
Link overall brain size to intelligence, and ultimately to consciousness in humans is, to put: it mifdly, a rather sweeping approacb and one for which I have little a f f i ~ e . It needs to be discussed, however, because increasing brain size is fiequeatly asserted as the explandon for the evoludon of human superioriw. h a v e q general sense, variation in brain size bemeen diEferent species reRec& cog~tiveabiliq or intelligence. A larger brain, conains mare neurons, which aansmit infamadon in the form of e l e c ~ c a lsignals. The elechcal circuits
To
MNIJ1.S OF THEIR 8W
so h m e d are used to process informa~on,and &erefire a larger brain can handle mare infornation, Neurons also play an essendd role in memory format_ion. A cascade af malecuiar changes occws in neurons when a memory is laid down. It is possible that a brain with more neurons might -Eommore memories or mare detailed memories, d&ough we do nor b o w exacdy how h i s might occur, It is not the size of the brain alone that: counts. If this were sa, elephants wodd be much more intelligent than humans. We must not consider brain size wi&out ta&ng into account body size. Species with bigger bodies have proporzionately larger brains because a ceaain amount of rhe brain must be given over to coneolling muscdar movement and maintaining physiologicali functio~ng. A bigger body has a larger mass of muscles to conas1 and a larger surface area to monitor. Small fish have small, brains and large fish have large brains, and &ere is a direct relalionship bemeen brain weight and body weight across all of the species of fish, If brain weight is p l o ~ e dagainst body weight, each on a log scale, iFar a large number of species of teleosr (bony) fish, a straight-line relafionskp is found (i.e. as body weight increases so docs brain weight in a systerna~cway; see Fig. 4.1). The same relationship will emerge for other groups of anhafs if we plot them Eewise. A seaight-line reladonship exists for repdles, bkds, als and primates. als, the slope of the tine plio~ed For each group of a is less Lhan one, which means t b t , al&ough brain weight increases with body weight, it does not quire keep up, This prabably does not mean that heavier species have a lesser amaunt of brain capaciq left over for doing ~ n g other s than moving and manito~ngtheir Lafge bodies b u ra&er, ~ that the efficiency of neural circui~yhproves wi& increasing size. After all, wc know that elephants have v c v cornplex cognidvc abilities, as indicated by their learning capacity, long memories and tool use. As mendoned in chapter 3, Chevalier-Skolnikoff and Liska have reported aver men@ different types of tool use in elephants.
EVOLVING A
1000
Bum
FOR CQNSGXOUSNESS
Humans &h
Body weight (kg) o Bony Fish br Rsptilss A B
Birds Non primate mammals Primates
Fig. 4.1 Brain weight rs compared with body weight for different species of bony fish, reptiles, birds, nonprimate mammals and primates Source: Simplified from H.3. Jerison, 19'73, Evolution of the Brain and Intei/lgence. Academic Press, New York. Also in Banner, 113862.
There are &ffereraces befween. the brah-weight to body-weight rados of anbals in the different groups. Although the p l o ~ e dpoints for fish and repeiles fall on rougMy the same line, those of lower mammals and birds are on a line slighdy above this, m e a ~ g&at they have cansistendy larger brains for a given body weight. In o&er
M m S OF THEIR O W
wards, if we were to take a species of fish and a species of bird h a t had eq~valentbody weights in the adult .form, the bird species wodd have more brain in propohon to its body than t!ae fish species, The line for prbates is shifted yet a littie &at of bkds and lower ma als. For example, a hedgehag wei&hg 860 gams has a brain weight of around 3.4 earns, whereas a galago, a lower prhate, of the same body weight has a brain weight of around 20.3 Dams, m e n adjusted for body size the brain weight of primates is greater &an of the other groups, al&ough &ere is still variation the groups. We can compare the brain weight of the 860 @am galago with that of a New World prhate, the squkel mo&ey, weigGng around only 700 grams but with a brain weight of over 20 grams. h o n g s t the primates, the human, brain is the largest in propohon to body weight compared with all other species. Some 1.5 dfisn. years ago the h m a n brain. took an evoludsaary leap forward and increased in size relg~veto bczdy wei&t, This will. be discussed in more d e t d later. The order of increasing brain-weight to body-weight rados from fish and reptiles to birds and lower rna and then to pfimates and, lasm, humans refleas the order sf evalution (Fig. 4.2). h p k i b i a n s evolved from fish and reptiles evolved from amphibians. Reptiles gave rise to two branches of evoludon, the birds and the m evolved from lower and apes, w ~ c hinclude ates to evolve, Throughout humans, are the most this trajec~ryof ewolLltion the brain was increasiag in she relative ro &-he body. Are we at the pinnacle of this evolu.rionW~)uour large brah-weight to body-weight ratio explain our 'superior' intelligence and consciousness? Many people ~ n sok and, in the past, some scientists have gone so far as to consider that differences in brain size bemeen the sexes and races of h w a m ~ g h explain t the social dominance of same poups of humans aver orhers. One hundred years ago it was arfled by researchers such as the newsanatomist P. Broca and his c o a e a ~ e
Million years ago Bony Fish Amphibians
Reptiles
Birds Monolremes Marsupials
Lemurs
New World monkeys Old Wortd monkeys Lesser apes
Great apes Humans
Fig, 4,2 Evolution of the vertebrates, The dates at w M h the various groups first appeared are based on d&a of DNA hybridisation (described in chapter 5). The samples For analysis were all presently living forms; hence the list of names at time zero. This evolutionary scheme is quite similar to that determined from the record of fossits,
G. Le Ban that tke white male brain was larger than that
o f women and black people. It sus became fashionable to measure the size of the brains of e ~ n e r r tmen after their
deaths, but the weights of some were hand to be so embanassingly smaU eInztr &e fashion. warred. Brain, weight does not bear any relarianship to the differences bemeen individuaIs vvi~inthe same group, let done vvi&in the same species. Brain weight is a gjobal and goss measurement even t when it is adjusted for body weight. Perhaps it ~ g hexplain some of the differences h cogni~vecapace b e ~ e e nthe
poups of hshes and birds and so on, but: w i ~ the n brain &ere are numerous regions each specialised to pedorm one or some functions and not o&ers. OnZy if one &i&s of intdigeace in a u ~ a r yway is overall b&n size a consideradon, and even rhen intelligence mast depend an the neural eircuim in the many different regions of the brain and rheir interac~ons with each o ~ e r ,Each species tends to be uniquely adapted to survive in the eavkoment in which it finds itself. One enviroment might demand certain skills for suwlival and ano&er other sklls, Hence, there might be many different wpes of intelfigence, In each species, the brain regions speciaGsed to caru out the behaviour requked for s w i v d might expand in adaptation to the par"t;icdarenvironment. In orher words, as John &ebs of Oxford U n h e r s i ~ , m, has said, cag~L,ivecagacify may occur in a modules or elements, each adapted for the gaAcdar environment in which the species eleiists. We might rherefore look at the size of pahcdar regions wi&in the brain, rarher than rhe whale brain itself, and see w h e ~ e rthey correlar:e with specialised skills or moddes of cogr;titive capaciry. John Qebs togeher with Nicola Clapon, who is now at the U~versiwof Galikrda in Davis, USA, have done just: this, They have measured the size of the part of the brain hvolved in spar;ial l e a ~ n gin bkds that store their food and in hose that do not, as meneiosled in chapter 3. That area of the brain is called the hippocampus, and it lies along rhe dorsal and rrzidine sudace of the farebrain of the bird (Fig. 4.3). They calculated tke volume of h e hippocampus rela~veto the rest of the forebrain as wel as a 4 u s ~ n gfor body weight. The r d a ~ v esize of the %ppocampus is larger in species that store and retrieve food than in species h a t do not do so. The demand for the storing bird to have the abG@ to remember where it has stored its food has been met by an esllargement of the area of the brain that processes the i n f o m a ~ o nused lFor this behaviour. fn species that are required to p e d o m other c o g ~ ~ vfeats c in order to suwive, Chert: may be an
EVOLVING A B M N FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
Fig, 4.3 The brain of a bird is shwn with a slice through the region of the fsrebrain that contains the htppocampus, Slices at this angle give cross sections that reveal what is inside the forebrain. In a cross section taken from a species that does not store food (A), the hippocampus is much smaller than in one taken from a species that does stare fwd. Based on Krebs et al. 1996.
expamion of re@;ions of rhe brain other than the hippocampus. Let me give another example of edargement of specific rell;ions of the brain far specialised behaviour. Only eerz;atin birds sing (pigeons, chickens and other GaEifomes do not sing) and in the %rebrain of bkds that sing &ere are a number of dis~nctclusters of neurons, eaUed xludei (nor to be codused with the nuclei inside cells) that c o n ~ a l singing behaviour. In fact, there is an. in~cslte system of hterconnected nuclei that are involved in both the perceg~onand r e c o g ~ ~ oofn song as well as the otxput: of singing behaviour (Fig. 4.4). Fernando N o a e b a b and
Higher vocal centre
Syrinx /
* to the lungs
Fig, 4.4 The left hemisphere of a canary's brain showing a collection of nucIei that are involved in singing. HVG is the higher vocal centre, The song is produced by the syrinx (not the larynx, as in mammals), which is located at the place where the air passage to (and frorn) the lungs branches into two Source: Adapted frorn Nottebohm, 1989,
his colleagues at RockefeIler U k v e r s i ~in New York, USA, have discovered &at in the sprkg, when song bkds defend territsrgr and sing, &ese nuclei increase in size by the addirjon of new neurons. That is, .they edarge when they are needed and shri& at other h e s . The a b ~ to q make new neurons like this is a ra&er remarhble abiliq of the avian brain, riot present in mammalian species, One of the nuclei involved in bath. perception and production of song is cafied the higher vocal cen&e, In 1993 DeVoogd, &ebs and their colleawes found that the size af this nucleus in &fferent species of song bkds correlates tvi-ct.1the camplexiv of song in the various species.
FOR COhTSGIOUSmSS
mcleus appeass to reflect its FuncThus, the size of tional capaciv. Even within a species, there may be a relazrionship bemeen the size of a parficular region, of the individual's brain and that individual" sapaciq to perfom a specialised behaviom. Nortebohm has found that there is same depee of comeladan, b e ~ e e nthe size of the higher vocal cenwe, and the size of &e ixzdividual songbhd" repeaoire. Canamies add to their song each year and individuals sing specific songs, Nontebolzm analysed the canaw's songs by b r e a h g &em down into phrases, syllables and elements and &us he was able to rank songs according to their comple~ry.. This ra&ng had a posidve r e f a ~ o n s ~top the size of the higher vocal cenwe, al&ough there was a reasonable amount of variadon in rhe data, Even if the relationship bemeen singing behaviour and nucleus size is not pedecdy consistent, in&cafing &at other factors must influence it, the results suggest h a t the size of a speciallised region of the brain may refliect an individual" capaciv to perfom the behaviour associated with h i s brain region. For example, ~o birds of the same species h g h t have the same total brain wei&t (appropriately adjusted far body weight) but one may have a larger relahve size of the song nuclei and sing a more complex and varied song, whereas the ather may have anaeher part: of its brain edarged and p e s o m better in the behaviour conwalled by this brain region, So far, there have been no experimental sm&es showing this, but it is a reasonable prediction to make, There is a n o ~ e rhpoaant: factor that we must take into account when we consider brain size. The overa size of the brain is affected by expe~ence, and the size of regions of the brain is affected by pedormance of the behaviour associated with a partlicular region. Considering the overall brah size first, M a ~ o nDiamond at the University of California, Berkeley, USA, has demons~atedthat rats miwd in an enriched envhoment develop a larger brain than &ose kept in an h p o v e ~ s h e denviro enriched envkonraxent was ane Mrirh ~tklerrats present and
MWDS QF W E I R O W
toys to play with, and the hpoverished enviro in isola~on from other rats and in a standard, baring laboratory cage. The size of the brain, of rhe rats in rhe e ~ c h e bcondiGon increased by expansion of the chess of a region of the brain called the cofiex. The number of conneedons bet-vveen. the neurons increased and the sizes of the paints of conact betpvveen the neurons (the synapses) hcreased by a remarkable 40 per cent. TXat is, e n ~ c h e n t caused an hcrease in the amount of conneeriviw bemeen newsrrs in ehe conex, and the cogni~vecapaciry of the rats changed along with &is, The rats f o m the emiched enviroment had s u p e ~ o rabilities in. findhg their way through mazes to find food* These changes occwed after as IiMe as thiay days in the e ~ c h e denviromene and in. both yomg and old rats. n u s , cofiex size is not: a fixed aspect of an individud but vahes with experience, A sim2ar dependence of size on. expe~encehas been hund for the hippocampus h the food-sto~mgbirds, The oppomnriw to store food is essen~alfor enlargement of the fippocampus in the food-starkg birds, Qebs and Clapon prevented marshdts from being able to store food by feeding &em on powdered food. Later, at v a ~ o u sages, they were @ven pieces of food which could be stored in ahficial trees irzside a room, FoUsvvin~the s t o ~ n gexperience, and at all of the ages, the voime of the hippocampus increased. Two processes appear to have Ld to the increase in size. More neurons are famed an$ fewer are lost by namral a ~ ~ o n . If marshrits are completely prevented from staring food, the volume of the hippocampus decreases because rhie newons in the hippocampus are not replaced as fast as they die. These recent findings show us &at the brain is in constant interaellion vvi& .the envim ent and that use or disuse affects its size and neural circuim. Qf course, here we are t a l b g about effeces within a species, As far as we b o w , it is not possible to make one species equivalent to another &rough experience, evea in the case of closely related species. Kfebs and C l a p n have imesrigated this
EVOLVMG A 13aiZIb.f FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
by ~ v h gnonstoring birds the oppomnity to use spatial
memoq to r e ~ e v efood in the laboratov. The experimenters had srrategicdy hidden food inside small holes in arr;ificial sees and the birds were released one at a rime into the room to retrieve the food, M ~ o u g hnonstarers will not store they will r c ~ e v e ,and &ey mi&t m k e use of spadal abiIities to remember where the food is hidden. They were compared with a storing species that, u n ~ lthe h e of rhe experinnem, had been deprived of the opporcuni~ to store or rerrieve. Therefore, the hippocampus in botfi species would have been small at the eo the expe~ment,roughly the same size reEadve to the rest of the forebrain in both species. After Ehe birds had the oppomnir~pto rewieve food, the hippocampus of the storing sgecics increased in size relarive to the rest of the forebrain but that of the nonsto~ngspecies remained small. As &cbs has said, we camat be sure that the nonstorers did, in fact, use spadal memow in the task. They ~ g hhave t used o&er cues, such as details of the pauern or cdour of the area sumounding the hole, to remember the location of the fizod. in fact, s&er experiments have shown &at nonstorers do, in fact, have more tendency to rely on colour r a ~ e ban r spa.ciaf cues to find food- Use of a nonspadril seategy would have prejudiced the restrlts of &is expe~nnenrc:loa&ng at the effects of r e ~ e v i n gfood an hipgocampal size because atten~snto crues a&er than. spa~cialones wodd have tr~Esed other regfiarrs of the brailixl &an ehe ~ppocampus.Neverzheless, we can conclude &at the same enviramental demand has not changed the hippocampus of the aonstokg species to become like h a t of the swring species. Thus we can consider large differences b e ~ e e nspecies from an evolu~onarypoint af view as characteris~cof the species, even &augh experience might hfluence their development. This may be zhe case for most comparisonis invdving large differences in the size of various relons af the brain. and species differences in the overall orgaksahan of the brain, However, we must always keep in mind the iduences of h e erzviroment on the development of the brain,.
m a t might cilfferences in the overall size of the brain mean at a funedod level? A bigger brain with mare newons and more comecdons b e ~ e e nneurons may fmcon more efficiendy or more ~ n t e f i i g e n ~ y ~one a n wih fewer neurons but this is not necessarfiy so, It depends on haw the neurons are canslected to each other and posshly on many a&er factors &at we do not yet b o w about. There are other ceUs in the brain, the glial. ceus men~oned earlier and, as quite reeen~ydiscovered, they even have some part to play in the e l e c ~ c a al c ~ v i qof the hain, The number and dis~budoxl of the various glial cells may iduence how a brain hxtcsions. Marion Diamond looked at a s m d part of Einstein" brain, preserved after his dea&, and found that it had relalri.vely more dial cells as a rado to neurons than the average h m a n brain! The assumption that "igger is be~er-is the basis of most theo~esabout the evolufion af the human brain made by anthropologists and many biologsts. have some vafidiw when one is cornpad closely rclared species, for example chimpanzees and humans, recent howledge about the avian brain ceaaidy &rows the assumption &at bigger is always better into doubt, As discussed in chapter 3, bkds can perfam problem-solving tasks and other complex cogninive tasks just as weU as can primarcs, despite 2he fact that bkds have very much matler brains and, of more importance, a lower ratio of baia vveight to body weight. The bralns of birds are made up of nezlrons and @ial cetls the same as the afian brah but are organised quite differendy. There is a m h e r major dfference befween avian and mammalian brains: new newons can be made in the addt avian braia aliiian brain. The mammalian but not in the adult ma brain, the h m a n brain being one of these, makes new neurons (and glial cells) when it is growing before birth and for a time after bifi, but after this g o d phase no new neurons can be fomed, even to repair damage. There for the addt mamma~an might bc a little residul brain to form neurons, as Scheibel at the Unjversi~
of Cstlifornia, USA, did c h w e to see a neuron dividine: to Eom a new one in a preserved spechen of a cat brain, but &is a b i l i ~is negli@ble. No dviding neurons have ever been seen in. the adult brain of pfimates. No one bows why adult birds retain the ab3iw to make new neurons whereas als do not, but Rmanda suggeseion about what No~ebohmhas made a p funcfion, &is abiEq &ghr sewe in birds, A bird wi& a heavy brah rela~veto its body weight w u l d have more dfficulty in fljping. Brain Gssue is very heam, and a heavy head, so to speak, might make a bird nose dive or furit to fly in a less aerodyraamicauy seeadined posmre. Therekre, N o m b o h suggese, the bird may mu rhe sizes of different parts of the brain at different h e s of rfne year as h e y are required, As he has shown, the sizes of rhe song nuclei in the forebrah irtcrease d ~ n the g breeding season when singng is required. Presmzibly, at the same h e the sizes of o.tfaer blraiirz regions d g h t s h ~ &so that the increased size of the song nuclei might be aceornmoshll. Of course, &ere might be orlzer odafion such as diminishing the v a l u e af the v e n ~ d e s(fluid-filled spaces) in ine forebrain or decreasing the fluid-filled gaps b e ~ e e ncells in. the brain, So far no one has compared the size changes in ffie song nuclei with other re@ons of the same brain, However, many song birds migrate, and very recendy John f i e b s has found some evidence &at the expel7ienee of nnieation, increases the size of the hippocampus in Eke European garden warbler and in a species of finch, As migra.tian demands highly developed spatlial abilities used by the bird in navigarion, this result is e n ~ e l yconsistent with Gebs' and Cltaflan" earlier work on the ~ppocampus. For our present consideradon, we may take the garden warbler's life history one step f u d e r and propose &at once it has a ~ v e d ,with its endiarged hippoempus, at the site where it will breed, its song nuclei will enilarge as it begins to sing to advedse its sexual amac~venessand advedse &at ttze bird its terrimry, Depending on the s p a ~ a ab%ees l
MINES 65; THEIR O m
must use to monitor its t e ~ t o r y ,the hippocampus may stay edarged or regress in size. If the latter occurs, there ~ g h be t h e s h a ~ n gof the different brslin regions, and in this way the bird can keep its overall brain size smdler at any one time of the year, In other words, by juggling one area against anoaer it might keep brain weight at an o p ~ m a lIow level, The present findings point to this possibiit~but there is much more research needed to prove or disprove it. However, we can say definitely that it is invalid to use brain size as an index of csmparadve 7irrteBigence"e~een ds. I want to emphasise the special abaifies of birds because they are usualfy left out in debaks about Efic evolu~onof consciousness. There is an underlying finear concept of the evoIudon of consciousness along the mamform in hwans. Having malian line, reaching its &verged earlier from the ian line of evolufion, birds are almost &ways ignore ey have developed cognitive abilities comparable to those of mammals, even g~mates,using &fferent neural circtrim and special abifiries to f o m new brain cells. als camot increase the size of re6ons of their brains by makng new neurons, they can, as men~onedpreviousXy, increase the size and number of comec~onsbemeen neurons depending an expefience, and this expands the size of the paAcdar brain region. ?rhus, even in mammals, the size of va&.iousbrain regions is not: fixed and is not exelusively a resdr of biological predes~narion. Instead, it is deternine8 by the interacdsxl betvveen bialogicd events and enviromental factors a c ~ n g&roughout the life span. aIs, as well as other In early life the brain of rna species, is pahcuiarly dependent: on enviromenal srimuIatioa and experience, If, for example, mrmal visual aperience does not occur, the fegion of the brain (the visual coaex) &at nomaUy processes visual information is taken over by auditoq neurons (which. respand to sound) w ~ c invade h it from a nearby area of the brain. Apparenay,
EVOLVMG A BMIP;r' FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
ses the kind of processing &at it has to cany out in early life. Xr adapts quite remarkably and this experience-dependent development affects brain function for the rest of the life span. The smdy of enviromental influences on rhe development of the brain is a major focus of the field of xleurobiolagy, but anrhropologists and psychologists have paid little aaention to rhese new discover;ies, When the abi~ties of different species are compared much more consideration shodd be given to tke effect of experience an brain she and orga~saltion.The problem-solving a b ~ b e s of animds raised in hpoverisbed condi~onsin a hauses or laborato~esare often compared with those of fimans. We do not h o w how much of the apparent superioriw of h m a n s over chimpamees, for example, results from our vasdy en~chedexperience compared with the experience of the laborator~2.-confi~]ied chimpamees to which we have k e n compared, and how much can be a ~ b u t e c lt s the genefic endowment of our species. Yet almost always the Bifferences found are a ~ b u t e dto g e n e ~ c causes alone. They are seen as immutatsle haharks of Lhe different species. If any c o g ~ ~ vgap e exists beween h m a n s and apes, tfien it has smeIy been widened by all of the laboratory-based smdies conducted so far. 1 suggest that we are inclined to be less critical of e x p e r h e n ~ design l and the interpretation. of the data when tlhe results seem to show what we deske: human superioriv. There are even problems in comparing the co&~ve abilities of one species raised in captlivi~with those of anotber species atso raised in capfive, because species vary in their adaptability to captivity and to isolated or p u p living. Orang-utans, for instance, are less active and apparently more depressed in zoos than are chimpanzees. Presmably thE: same occurs in capciviry in the laboratczv. These differences in adaptation to captivirq, are, perhaps, characterist_ie of the w a species, but measured differences in co&~ve abilie may be merely the outcome of the effects
of caprj.viq rali.rer than &emselves being characterisdc of species, There may also be individual differences in adaptation depending on, past expel-ience or other factors, Marion Diamond has suggested that age may be a factor in this, as vrre h o w it is in humans. She suggesed that: old rats may fare b e ~ e rin isolatjon, whereas younger ones $0 beaer when Eving in groups. Rarely, if ever, are species and individual differences such as these taken into account when species are compared in terms of coM'cion or other behaviours. h fact, very often, data collected from one, two or a few members of a p ~ m a t especies are taken as represeata~ve of rhe e n ~ r especies. The sign-laapage abilities of the few chimpanzees or orang-utans so ~ a i n e d are inteqreted as indicai~veof their e n ~ r especies, al&ough we would never do aewise with data coHected from a few humans. We reca@se that humans vary enomously but, as discussed in chapter 2, we do nor amibute the same variabaity. to in&viduals of other spedcs. T o remm to brain size and brain orga~sarrian,&ese also varq" wi& exper;ience. By emphasising &is, 1 do not want to discard evolu~onaqrf?eoPlies of brain size and cognizion completely; ra&er, I u.ish to raise a cansidered element of doubt about m&ng d e f i ~ t esearemcnts brain size to cogni~veabifiw, intelligence or conscisusness, AU too ofien, we see diapams of arrimal brains ordered Gom small to large as representjng intellfjgence or, to use a presendy more acceptable tern, cognitive complexity (see Eccles, 1989, diagrams 37-39A; listed in the section on fur&er reading). The size of the whole brain and of the cortex, with increasing convofudons on its s d a c e (caged fissures), is the only c~teriontaken into consideradsn. W i their ~ smafl brains, which have few, if any, eonvalul-iorrs on the surface, birds fall close to the bonom of &is hierarchy, but this r a n b g does nclt march their c a g ~ b v eabaides. The avian brain has solved its cognitive demands in a way quite different from that of the mammalian brain, and
&c;
EVOLVmG A BRAm FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
its srnalf size indicates nol_hng of its cog~Gvecomplexi~. It may well be that the size of a particular, specific region of the brain correlates wi& the complexiq af its specific behavioural funcdon, as menhoned previously3 but total brain size does nor indicate a great deal about overall cognli-tive capaciw, or 5nteHigence'.
Mammals evolved from regbles over 200 million years ago and Mii.eh them emerged a new layer in rhe cerebral hemispheres of the brain. The new layer is known as the neocorrcx; rnore recendy, it has been termed the isacoflex. I wiU keep to tfie older name of nencortex because it is mare f a d a r , The ncocortex became layered an top of the rnore primi~vepaleocafiex, also called the allocoaex (see Fig, 4.5). The. exact origin of the neoeortex is disputed but it appears h a t even the earliest had six different . With the fizder layers of newe cells wi&in the evolution of rnammafs the neoco~ex expanded in size reladve to ehe rest of &c brain, and it appears to have done so many ~ m e sover to give rise to different Ekes of mammals with different orgassa~lionsof the coflex (meaning the whole cortex, paleocofiex plus nescoaex). In mammaXs wi& large brahs the neocoflex is expanded rdarive to the rest of the brain and the neuronal comec~orrs in the canex are more complex, allowing more complex processing of information. The expansion of size af the neoeaaex was mainly along its surface ratf-zer than its &icbess, and thus the surface of the cortex became more canvoluted and c r i a e d (i.e. with more fissures or crevices; see Fig. 4.6). During the evolurjion of mst. of the surface of the neocoaex increased much more &an a .trhousand-fold with no comparable increase in thichess. The s d a c e area of the xleocanex of a macaque mo&ey is one hundred times greater &an .chat: of a mouse, The relative size of the neoeoaex is largest in humans, a
MINDS OF THEIR O W Birds
Mammals
Flg..4.5 The pateocort@xmeans the bold cortex" It evolved first and, later in evolution, the neocortex was fayered over it, Reptiles do not have a neocortex and nor do birds. Birds evolved more complex brains by elaborating the paleocortex: their forebrain is paleocortex The neocortex evolved with mammals and it expanded in size as evolution proceeded.
housand-fold greater than the surface area of the neocortex of the macaque mokey. One can ask what factors in the environment fight have iduenced the evolu~onof a larger xreacoaex in some species compared with that of others, b a n g the nonhuman primates, mo&eys and apes, it seems that diet and sociaii rela~onships were significant facmrs in seleehg fm different sizes of the neocoaex in different species, T s s ~ mSawaguchi of the Prhate Research Insrimte in Kyoto, Japan, &vided a large n m b e r of nohuman primates into diffelrexzt groups a c c o r b g to h e k diet, their habitat and their social smcmre, and measured the volume of the neoeoaex relatjve ta the volme of the rest of the brain, By loo%king at rhie reIa&ve size af the neoconex, it
EVOLVING A BMII?J FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
Fig. 4,fi
Brains of various mammalian species showing increasing
amounts of convolution of the neocortex as it increases in size.
was possible to conera1 for rtariafions in overafi brain size lhar wodd vam with body size, itsdf related ~co diet and
o&er factors, Thus, Sawaguchi was not ixrterested in. total brah size, adjusted for body weight, but in the way that t?ae brain might have become argaxlised, the expansion of one region relative to the others, The fmdiings were very intereshg. Those p ates that feed prirnady on fmit, a l ~ o u g ht!ixy. might take some insects and leaves, were found
ta have higher relative v s of the neocoaex than primates ehat feed predomimnlly on leaves. This migbt, perhaps, be explained by rhe fact that fdt-eaters have to search Eor their food, which is usually raha sparsely dis~ibuted,a f ~ G n tree g occurring here and there or in small clumps, whereas leaf-eaters find &eir food more cvenly distributed. Also, fruit ripens at only cerrain dmes of the year and fruit-eaters must remember when that is. For example, orang-utans are known to visit their favourite fmi-ting mes only when rfne fmit is ripening: they remember when that is and do not, need to keep remrning m see if the fruit is ripe. Fmit-eaters, therefore, rely on well-cleveloped abiliries to f o m and remember spatial and temporal maps of their environment. These abiXities might be acbieved by having a large neoeoaex rela-rive to the rest of the brain, However; there is a problem here because m als process s p a ~ a l Sorma~oxzin the kppocampus (as do birds) and the hippocampus is not in the neocoflex. Atso, as mendoned previously for p a z k g a als, leaf-eaters can be quite selecdve in their diets, Social s m c m e also influenced &e relative size of the neocofiex. The polygamous species (ones in which males had many female paflners) had significandy larger rela~ve xreocoaex volumes &an monogynous species (ones that fisrmed shgle malefemale p a m e r s ~ p s ) .It is not at all clear bow having more pamers ~ g h hfluence t the size of the neocoaex, but the latter was also iduerzced by the size of the prhate" social s o u p (i.e. troop size). The larger the @clop size, the larger was the relative size of the neocomxr. Sawawehi suggeskd &at this relationship ~ g h r be explained by inhviduals in larger .troops haviag to remember more faces, vocatisa-tions and behavioural ebaracterisrcics of their &sop members, Of course, all of these relationsEps do not tell us direcdy what the causal factors are, We can only speculate and should remember that the iduexlces could be indkect, caused by some other factor that goes along with e a ~ n gfruit or being in. a ]large ~ o o p , such as encountering different ~ n d of s predators dependbg
EVOLVMG A B U M FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
on where food is fomd and on more or less grotecrion d e p e n b g on troop size, Even rhough we camat say conclusively what was the exact factor &at led to fhe expansion of the neocorcex, tfiese calculations show that some aspects of che enviromem lead ro 'Ehe seleczjon of species w i dzferent ~ rela.tive sizes of the neocofiex. Along wi& the neocoflex, an en~refynew stru evolved in the cerebral hemispheres of ma smcmre is a large tract of nenies c o m e c h g the two ceret7raI hemispheres to each otfier and it is called the corpus callosm. This @act is not present in repzilian or avian brains, wGch have a number of much srnaUer @acts connecling each side of the brain, The size of the corpus caUosm, relaeive to the rest of the brak, is largest in humans. Thus, humans have more aneocoflex and more comec.tion;s bemeea the separate neocodcal regions of the left and right ke~spheres.The GOX~~PUS call~surnappears to have an hpoaarzt role in preventing the left and righcr hemispheres from both c a q h g out the same function, h a t is, from duplicating functions. T h i s appears to be possible because the corpus eallosum %&S areas in one hennisphere to .t_hek equivalent areas in the other h e ~ s p h e r e ,hereby allowing iAibition by an area in one hemisphere of its equivalent in. the. other hemisphere. This wodd generate lstteraliisadon. of the h e ~ s p h e r e s(each h e ~ s p h e r ecawing out a different set of .Euxrcboxzs), which is discussed in the next section,
was associated wi& the evolution of intefligence and, ultimately, consciousness. In tlnek book en~detd,Neocortical Development, w r i ~ e nin 1991, Bayer and Mman state: 'It is widely assumed &at the evolu~onaryg r o d of menral life that reaches its z e ~ &in h m a n s is a ~ b u t a b l eto the progressive expansion and elaborafion of &e neoc~nex" (Bayer and Aman, 19%). The foaawing quote is in a shilar vein: ' . . . cornparabve neurobiolow is aa integral part of attempts to understmd the functional organka~onof the neocoflex and,
'VNDS OF' THEIR O W
d~mately,the evolur_ion of more complex functions at are generated by the neocoaex, such as percegdon, cog~ h o nand csnsciousness" itzer, 199%). These are but ~o quo on &erne amongst neurobiologis~, who specialise in the smdy of neurons, other cdls in the brain and brain s m e m e . The p i ~ a afor &ese scientists is that, udomnately, hey hwe liae f a d i s t r i ~w i a the sfudy of al behaviour or comparadve psycholom. Their howledge of the brain itself is nor: matched by howledge of the behaviour of the anhais in quesricaxz. Before sensible rela~onships can be estabgshed bemeen brain organisa~onon the one hand and behaviour on the other hand, sciendsts need to be well versed in both fidds. 1 stsess this because perception, c o g ~ ~ oand n consciousness can be measwed only in terms of behaviour and s have we want to be able to discover whetfier on the consciousness. The satemerzt by &ubi=er is assmption that consciousness evolved only in the mammalian line, S N&ough the neocomx might have provided w i h tbe neural skxbstrate (i.e. neural ckaits and s 1 required fir intelligence and consciousness, wz'lihozdt a neocoaex birds have complex cogni~veab2i~esthat rival &ose of species with the neocofiex. T h e hypa&esised association of the neoeoaex and consciousness is generated from a human-cen~edposidsrrr. Ody in human$ it is assumed, has the neacortex become daborate enough to give rise to consciousness. Evolving from a repd-ian ancestor evolu~on separate from that of rria acquired cqnifive abiliries using diffe brain and Bifferent newaI ckcuits, As said before, the the avian brain is quite different from that of stru the lian brain, Reeog~"tin of this should tell us that the ngocoftex might not be essential far intelligence and cogrri-t_ionbut, as we have seen, birds have usually been ignored or underestimated by the scientists who have written about &e evoludon of inteuigence and consciousness.
E V 0 L V a T 6A B
FOR CQNSCIOUSNESS
Sir John Eccles, fomerly of the Ausu-alian Narional Universi~and winner of the Nobel Prize for his discoveries about the electroghysiology of neurons, has developed a hypothesis about the evofurian of consdousness based on. the presence of certain cells and circuits in the neocofiex, h the neocoflex &ere are neurons of a p a ~ c u l a rshape h o r n as pyramidal cells and rktese are clustered into bundles called dendronis (Fig, 4.7). As far as can be deduced from modern brains in vafious species, the dendrsns first appeared in the brain 200 milliion years ago in the first, primitive mammalian neocortex. m e r e are about 40 ~ l l i o nof &ese dendrons in the human neocoaex. Eccles has hypoxbesised &at the dendrons are essen~alfor cansciousness. He speculates that e l e c ~ c a l a e ~ v i w in the denkons interacts with the "orld of the mind30 produce what he caUs units of eomciousness, or psychons. 'Thus, he ties consciousness to a padcdar cdl type, on. the assumplcian that only in m. als did consciousness evolve. As the pyramidal eeJls of the neocofiex are smcmrafiy very complex and have a great many connecbons, they are a good starting point for the smcmral correlate of consciousness, but they probably do not play an exclusive role in the mechanisms underlying conscious &ought, Besides, it wodd be difGcult, if not impossible, to test the hspo&esis that: the dendsons might be the Location of conscious mental processes. Eccles men~onsthat birds show insigh~ulbehaviour and calls for fu&er examinadon of a parf of the avian brain, the Wulst, to see if the neurons there might have on w i hose ~ of she neocoaex of would provide useful. compa~sonto test rztred hyps&esis but, even if they do similar to &at of ma nor prove that &ose particular circuits generate consciousness, More recently a subregion of the neocomx, the prefrontal cortlex, located in the fronal lobes, has been desipared a special role in. human consciousness. The prefrsmsrl cortex occupies about one quarter of the human
Fig. 4.7 Pyramidal nerve ceIIs in the mammalian neocortex, A single pyrarnidai celi is shown on the left, These cetls are interconnected in groups, called dendrons, as shown on the right Souree: After Eccfes, 1992.
neocortex, an apparent advmce on the peat apes wEch have a prefrontal coflex occupying only about 14 per cent of their neocsnex, Some neurosckn.tjists call the prefrontal and headquaners" and recently .they have p a ~ c u l a rf o m of synchronaus elect;rieal a c ~ hewn ~ ~ as, theta rhMnn, when a person is in deep &ought. Xn~ighgd and self-reflective tlzi in humans has been a ~ h t e to d the prefrontal coflex. By hplicafion, an-imals, hcluding the great apes, may be said to lack insight
FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
and reflection, or to manifest it in a less-developed fom. As a Row on from &is hypothesis there has been a suggestion that autistic individuals, who are said to show little understanding of their own mental states or those of orher individuals, may have impaired funcoioning of the prefrontal cortex, although there is insufficient evidence to substan~atethis c l a h . Moreover, the associa.tion of consciousness with an area of the brain that happens to be larger in humans echoes the earlier arguments about bigger being bener. I have already discussed the cono.ary evidence relating larger brain size to higher intelligence and consciousness and the same c~hcismcodd be appged to the h6\.pothesised link b e ~ e e nthe size of the prefrmral c o ~ e x and conseiousrzess.
In 1995, Barbara finfay and Rchard DarXhgon, wfiting in the journal Science, proposed a model that: might: explain the accelerated expansion of the: necrcoflex in. the evolution dian brains, the h m a n brain being at the top of an exponendal increase in the size of this imponant re@an. of the brain, Recowsing &at each species is subjeaed to rhe forces of namral seleceon, that lead to it op~misingits behaviour in a padcular enviroment$ they asked what changes h g h t take place in the brain to auow a species to dewlop a padcular speciafsed behaviour, controlled by a ga&eular locaEsed regon of the brain. For example, as discussed earEer in &is chapter, birds h a t use s p a ~ a l S o m a ~ o nto store their food and find it again. have an enlarged hippocampus. This is a special adapmdon to their paAmX_ar enviroment3 the birds s t o h g flood when it is abundant and r e ~ e v i n git when it is scarce. M store food (e.g. squkels) likewise have an enlarged hjrppocampal, region of tke brain. f i m a l s that have hands and can use &ern m catch prey or to manipulate objects have edargement of the pafl of the neocoflex that deals with the sense of touch f o m the hands, This se@ort of the
MINDS OF THEIR O W
ary somawsensov area, The her;ican raccoon, for example, has hands &at it uses in catching its prey and, compared with its nearest relaraik~es, it has a much enlarged pfimary sornatosensory area, and a larger padon of this area is devoted to processing information received kom the hands than it is in other species. In faczr, the infamadon about touch is sent from the hand in a consistent arrangement so that &ere is a map of the hdividwl digits of the hand on. this area of the brake How is the enlargement of an area specialised to ge&arm a gadcular adll.pdve fundon achieved, and what happens to the oher brain smcmres when this one region expands to make an adaptarion to a parzicular environment? Finlay and Darlingon wondered whe&er adaptaraion af a species to perform a special behaviour in a p a ~ c u l a r environment might have led to the expansion. of only the region (or regons) of the brain needed far &at pzihcular behavrisur or whefher other areas increased afong with it. afs at least, the They reasoned that, amongst the ma latter may be m e because, when a brain is developing, it makes new neurons in a psthcu3ar order, and this order altian species, To make one is ahosr idenficaJ in afl ma area of the brain larger and keep the same order 'Ear m a h g new neurons, all regions that develop at che same dme and after the requked region wodd have to edarge along with it, If this is what happens, the sefec~ancif one specialised a b i l i ~(e.g. hands to cateh prey) would lead to an expanded capacity to pe&orm orher specialised funcrions. 'Ibere are same examples that seem to S ~ ~ ~ O this T I : proposirion. The Australian su-iped possum (Dactylopsilu tevirgata) has a special adaptation for its mode of feeding in the canopy of the rainforest: it has one digit 1ongtt-r than the others and it can use &is digit to get insects otat af holes in Qees, h also has the largest brain, corrected for its body weight, of all marsupials. Thus, its adaptation of a special digit may have led to an overall increase in brain size, not just an incxase in the size of the brain region con~aflhgthe &git itself.
E V O L W G A BRAW FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
Put in. o ~ e words, r acquirkg one specid a b i l i ~may chance the brak3 sapcity for perfoming many other special funcfions. Thus, according to &is proposaf, h e n the hooves of undares (horses, donkeys, etc.) evolved first to paws (of rats, cars, etc.) and then to the hands of primates, not o d y did the region of the neocomx used to cone01 the forelimbs expand in size but so diid the e n ~ r e neaconex. The adapta~onmade might have been specifically to evolve hands and &e abiliw to use &em to ma&pulate objects, but many other abilides went along with this acquisircion of the new behaviour. FirrXay rand Darf-ineon. measured the sizes of different regions of the brain of a large number of rna species livhg in different environments and p l a ~ e d of each region against the total brain size (see Fig. 4.8). They found that, as total brain size increases, the size of the neoeortex, in its entirery, expands relative to all of the orher regions of the brain, The size of the neocoflex increases at: a faster rate &an the size of the o&er brain regions (e.g. the cerebeuum, dieneephalon and pafeacaflex), In fact, the neocaaex expands exponenGally compared with the other regions of the brain. T o cite an example gven by Finlay and XL)arlin@on, the brain of the smallest shrew is some 20 000 times sunder &an the h u a n brain, whereas its neocofiex is more &an 100 000 ~ m e ssmaller. Of course, body weight has to be taken into account, but let us compare two species of compa y weightt: the of Madagasinsect-earing temec (a hedgehog-like car) has a brain that is ten times smaller *an at of a s a m e 1 monE=ey, but a neocofiex that is sixty times smaller than that of the squkel modey, The h m a n neoconex is at the tap of the exponentjal curve. Perhaps the human acquisirion of s m e specific behaviours such as wa&ng in a more upright posmre and use of the hands in maGng tools led to an exponenrid increase in the size of rhe aeocortex. Thus, along with Ihese adaptalions, we might have acquked the increased brain capacify for tl?ifing3 for conseio~~nes~,
brain
Total brain size Fig. 4.8 The sizes of four diMerent structures in the brain are compared with the total size of 'the brain. The data have been collected frarn various different species and lines have been drawn to connect them all, instead of plotting singfe dots for each sample measured. Note that as brain size increases, the size c>f' the neocortex increases in an accelerating fashion (i.e. exponentially), whereas the size of the other structures increases in a more linear fashion. Therefore, with increasing brain size, the neocortex makes an increasing contribution ts the total volume of the brain Source: Adapted from Finlay and Darlington, 1995,
This hypo&esis could explain the evoltrdonary leap foward in the human brafi.1, occuning 1.5 to 2 d l i o n er in chapter 5). It: shaultd, years ago (.fa be discussed however; apply to o h e r branches of evolution and it could be tested for avian. species. Do the food-sto~ng species have other special ab&~es&at evolved along wirh their abit_jiv to store food using &eh larger hippocampus? Do owls, which are perfecdy adapted to searching for their
G A BMm FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
food in the dark of night usim specialised abilities for locahg the source of sounds made by h i r prey, have other special abilities &at they acquised with this specialisation? Indeed, are they more inteEgentt because of this and, as to go f u d e r , might they have acquked conscio~l~nes~ a consequence? m e s e are ex~emelyinteresGng q-uesrions, but at this h e they. carnot be answered,
Laterdisa~onof the brain refers to spedalisa~anof the he~sipheresof the brain to taw out &ferent fixnetions, to process dfferent SOBS of infoma.fion and to eoneol different behaviours. For example, in the xnajo~q of humans speech is conaolled by the left befisghere and the percepmal processes that allow us to understand lanpage are also located in &at h e ~ s p h e r e ,n e left h e ~ s p h e r e conwols the right hand and, in most people, the left hernisphere is used to c o n ~ o w l h ~ n gand many o&er acts &at are p e ~ o m e dby the right hand. The ~ g h ht e ~ s p h e r e in h m a n s is involved wi& emotional behaviour, pahcularly nega~veemorions such as fear and discontent. For this reason, the facial expressions &at simal these emotions are expressed more s~rongiyon the IeA side of the face, On the orher hand, when most people spek, the dght side of the rn~uehopens wider and sooner than the left side. The right hefisphere is also involved in dete lacarcions of objects and &us con~ofso w our way using maps. These hncrjonal bterafisa~onsof the hemispheress in h m a n s are matched by smcturd as The Sylvian fissure that runs b e ~ e e nthe two major language and speech areas in the left hemisphere is longer &an its ewivalenf in tbe right hernisphere (Fig, 4.9A to 4.9C). The back part of the left hemisphere, the occipital cortex vvkich is used for vision, is larger &an the same region of the right he~splzereand the reverse is the case
MINDS OF THEIR O W PT Left
PI Right
Sylvian Fissure
ight
hemisphere C
Occipital (visual) cortex
hemisphere
D
Fig, 4.9 Left ((A) and right (B) views of the hemispheres of the human brain showing asymmetry in the regions used for speech: PT, planum temporate. Wo views looking down ifram the top of the brain are also shown. C is a view af the surface showing the asymmetry in the PT regions of the ten and right hemispheres and D is a section through the brain showing that the left occipital lobe is larger than the right and the right frontal lobe is larger than the left Source: Adapted from H. Steinmetz, 1996, Newscience and Bjsbehavioral R Q V ~ ~ W20, S , 587-591.
for the I"rom pass of the he~sgheres,b o w n as the frontal lobes (Fig. 4,9D),
Lateralisa~onaf the human brain was discovered more ban. one hundred years ago when it was nodced that people who had suffered a s ~ a k eleaving &em paralysed on the right side of the body suffered from aphasia, loss of the ability to speak, w h e ~ a sthose thaf had paraf~sison the Xefr: side of the body had no detecrable deficies in their speech, ?"he aphasia followed from damage to the left hemisphere, which cantsols the right side of the body. The specific region of the damage affecting speech surrounded the Sylvian fissure of the left h e ~ s p h e r e . Knowledge of lateralisation in the hwman brain advanced considerably witk the research of Roger Sgeny, who smdied "split-brainhpatients, ones who had had the cowus callosum e o n n e e ~ gthe hemispheres secdoned because they suffered from severe epilepsy. This operaeion prevents i d o m a ~ o nfrom being ~ansfeneddirecay from one hemisphere to the other, When such a subject looks straight ahead at a point an a screen and then a piemre is fiashed, say, in the left =&erne of the subject's visual field, the visual idorma.eion is sent to the sight hemisphere only and processed there. If the pieme is flashed in the exltreme right visual field, the infomaGon is sent to and processed by the left hemisphere and &is means h a t language and speech een&es are aceessed. Thus, the subjects can say the names of picmres of objects Bashed in the right visual fidd and they can also read words flashed &ere but, when the same images are flashed in &eir left visual field, they cannot do so. For example, if an image of an apple is presented in the right field, the subject can say 'apple" but that is not possible when the image of rhe apple is presented in the left field because the language cenpe in the left h e ~ s p h e r eeamot be aceessed. In ehe latter case, however, the subject is able to choose an apple from a bowl of fiuit to indicate what the right hemisphere has seen, Using this techn,;que, S p e w was able to show that the left hemisphere is specialised for foms of analy.tica1 &ought ineludhg mathemarical calculaeian, as well as for language and speech production, whereas the right
hemisphere is specialised for music appreciallion, spatJsil abiliries, expression of emotions and nonverbal processing of images. These results have been conf~medby modern tecmyues of 'irnaging' neural acGviq in a living, intact brain while the subject performs a certain task (see Fig. 4.10). We know now chat there are sorne aspecls of 1an~ag.e&at are processed by the righl hemisphere and tkar the left hemisphere is used by waked musicians to analyse music. Presumably ~ a i n e dmusicians have learnt to use differem neural circuits to analyse music, Exaclly wkch hemisphere is used by a @ven individual so taw out a padcular task appears to degend on past experience as well as the type of ~ o m a r i o nprocesskg used. The exisrenee of "split-bmin' ppafients, who had had the corpus c d o s m sec~oned,provided fuel for the debate on conseisusness. In the 1970s ~o scienbsts, Popper and Eedes, pub,;lished a dialawe about the potential paradox of *ese padents having two minds in one person*If conscious thou&t emerges from the neacogex, there is a possibaitqf that rhese "split-brainhftnbjects have mo separate minds because each side of the brain has a xleocortex. Ntema~veily, shce the left befisgbere is by far the one most co used far lanaage, perhaps eoxlsciousness resides h the left hemisphere only, This would mean that1 the ~ g h hemit sphere is mconsciaus, As men~onedin chapter I, the issue of an obfigatov associa~on beween consciousness and language underscores this debate, The dght h e ~ s p h e r eis capable of GgMy complex mental processes even though it camot express &em verbafly. Laxlmage is, indeed, a convenient: vehicle by wsch we can assess consciousness, but that does not mean, that a nonvabal hemisphere, or for that maEer a nonverbal person, necessa~lylacks consciousness. T o access consciousness of ehe right h e ~ s p h e r e d with the same Hficulbes as in Is have consciousness, Not suqrisingly, herefore, the queseon of two minds in m e pernon remains unanswered, It has, however, been observed fhat sorne 'spjit-brain' people mpe~enceconflic~ngemotions or
FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
auditory rtortex
Wernicke's area
Listening speech
molar cortex
Broca" area
Speaking
Visual cortex
Reading
Fig. 4.10 tmaging techniques show active regions of the brain (here PET scans, meaning Positron Emission tornography). The human subject is performing different tasks and different regions of the brain are active. See Fig. 5.4 as a reference point For the regions that are active Some: Adapted from G.D. Fischbach, 2 992, Scientific American, Sept., 3G31,
perfom conaary acts. One subject repofis opening a draw wih one hand wMe shu&g it with the other, horfier repofis p u ~ n gone a m around her husband to greet him wMe pushing h h away wi& the o ~ e hand. r h e there tx7sminds, with two moralides, in the same person? I &i& that &ese obsemarions might suggest so. They c e ~ d i d y b ~ d g ethe issues of consciousness in h m a n s and a and EgMight the need to develop methods of assessing ut consciousness w i ~ ~ fanwage. Far a loag time it was believed that lateralisation of the brain was a unique a ~ b u t of e hmarrs, associated wi& o w abili~esfor tool use, lanwage and consciousness. The association bemeen these three a ~ b u t e swill be discussed in more detail in chapter 5 when fiandedaess is considered also. Here we are interested in the brain hrrceions that might depend on h a ~ n ga latesafised brajin. Lateralisadon means that &ere are fewer funcdons duplicated in each hemisphere and, thus, the capaciw of the foretbrain may be effecrively doubled, This, it has been argued, explains the superior inteEgemce of h m a n s and also our exclusive abiliries of language and consciousness, W r i ~ n gin 1989, Eccles adhered to t h i s view. T o Eccles, consciousness is urxlque to humans and is a product of our highly developed neocofiex as well as of lateralisadon. He believed that all mo&eys and apes have symme~calbrains, etry (i.e. lateralisation) evolved in humans to overcome the problem of nee more neoeofiex. er expanding, he Instead af the size of the neocsfiex suggests, f ~ n ~ d o nofs the mocofiex were no longer duplicated on both sides of the brain. It is surprising that he held this view of lateralisation as unique to humans at the time he wrote it: because here was already clear evidence that manqr species of anhals have brain latesalisarion. As early as the early 1970s, Nottebohm and his co-workers at Rockektler I J ~ v e r s demonslrated i~ that here is lateralisarion for the c o n ~ o lof singing in song birds, such as canaries. he cut eiher the left or right nerve , the organ that produces the song, &at supplies h e
EVOLVING A B
FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
situated on the aiway from the lungs. Grxteng the nerve on the right side had no effect on singing but c u h g the neme on the left side prevented the bkd from singng. The c a n q perfomed like an actor in a silent film, going rough alX the motions of singng but u ~ e n n gonly and squeaks with an occasional syllable .fhr~wnin. Later Notfeboh traced &is lateralisa.tian to .she song nuclei in the brain (the ones that were discussed earlier in this chapter), Desiroying the higher vocal cezlee on the left side of the forebrain prevented the canan from singiging, but doing the same an the right side had no effect on song produc~on.Thus, Iaterafisation for song production. was demonseated. The role of the left h e ~ s p h e r eis interesting given that bird sang shares some of tke aspects of human fanpage and even involves lear&g: same species even learn to recoaise and produce local diaiects, Of course, we must remember hat3 if song is to be ilateralised, it has a 50:50 chance of being in the lee hefisphere. In fact, zebra finches have canwot of song larerailised to the dght h e ~ s p h e r e ,alaough all of the other species invesrigated sa far use the left h e ~ s p h e r e . role of the left h e ~ s g h e r ein speciesdon is hiigMighted by discove~esof left isadon. for processing vocaltsa~fjiansin a n m b e r of species of ma als. Japanese macaques process their species-vpical calls in the left hemisphere, Like humans, they show a right ear advanage for recog~sing voealisations, the right ear sendkg its infornation p to the left he~splhere.No difference is found bemeen ears for o&eq nonvocalised sounds, indicating rhar the lateralis-. atiun involves higher mural processing and is not simpty a resdt of one ear h e a ~ n gb e ~ e r&an the other. Fiats also show a 1-ight ear advantage for processing &eh speciesvpical vocalisa~onsand not h r otlher sounds, The sound hait has been tested is the high-pitched, d~ason_re. dis~ess call of rat pups. If the left ear of a morfrler rat is blacked with wax she will, as n o m d , run to a loud-speaker that is ernit~ngthe sound of her pups and anempt to r e ~ e v e
MMDS OF" THEIR O W
&ern, vvfnde at the same h e iporing a n e u ~ a signal l behg emimd from another speaker. Xf her right ear is blocked, she will approach both speakers at random, apparenGy ate the calls of the pups from the n e u ~ a l dy, by Holly Fitcb and o&ers at Rutgers U ~ v e r s i US& ~, has demonswated &at male rats also have a fight ear advantage far processing temporal sequences of tones, as do hmans. Clinical research on humans has suggested that there may be a link b e ~ e e n .temporal processing of sounds and processing af speech sounds by &c; left kexnisphere. m u s , children. who have diffieul~h l e a r e g Zanpage dso have $reat dzfictljq in disc rapidly presented tone sequences, The same is m e of people who have damage to the speech cenae in the left h e ~ s p h e r e .The i n a b a ~ta harzae temporal idomadon. c a ~ e saver to rfiose aspects of speech and h p a k s processing of Xanwage. The laterafised processing in rats mi&t, &erefore, represeng a very early specialisaxion of the left h e ~ s p h e r e which later in evolu.cian became used tisr lanpage. TXere appears to be no&ing pahcutfarly %urnanhabout use of the left h e ~ s g b e r eto process co u ~ c a t i o nsignals* "I'he same is also m e for use of the left hemisphere to produce voca~sarciom,as we have seen in birds. 'Even the frog Rana pipiens uses the left side of its brain to make alam calfs. Nso, the left side of the brain is used by male gerbils to produce the vocalisations that they make when they are courting a &male, The role of the left hennjsphere in vocal cone01 and percepeon is a verji ancient one, It is not an: exclusive role and is not an for all species, but it is hpresshely Many other brain furtct_iorzs are h the late 1970s I &scovered that y nate food grains from small pebbles using the left side of the forebrain. Soon after that %chard &drew aE Sussex Universi~,IJK, tested chicks on the same task with a patch on the left or right eye. He found that the chicks ested with the patch on their left eye coufd learn fa
G A B u m FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
$iscrenate the grains from pebbles, whereas &ose with a patch on the right eye could not do SO. This result. CO the specialisa6on of the left side of the forebmin for perfoming &is task because, in birds, most of the inforis pmcessed by the left mation received by the ~ g h t eye . hehsphere and vice versa, Following these ~ ~ sfudies a l with chicks, a large number of different finnctioxls have been found to be lateralised. T o give just one more example, in chapter 2 I menr;ioned the smdies of in&vidual r e c o M ~ o nin chjcks tested by placing the chick in an alley way with a f a m ~ a r chick at one end and an unfamaiar chick at the other end. The c ~ c kcan disc inate bemeera the f a d i a r and udamiGar chick and chooses to approach the farnaiar one. Giargio Vailodgara, at the U~versiwof U&ne, Itdy, and fichard h & e w , at Sussex Uxriversity, UK, conhuecl these exp&ments to see if the ckicb could do Bewise vvi& f a ~ l i a rand udam%itiar objects and then tested &em wi& a patch over the left or ~ g h eye. t Each chick was kept in a cage with a red ~ b l e - t e h sbafl suspended about five cexrbmetres above the Ooor level, The ball had a small, white lhofizantal strip on its equator, Mter a few days of becohng famifiar wi& this baU, each chick was given a choice of the famdiar ball placed at one end of the alley way and a red ball wi& the s ~ or.iented p vedcafly placed at. the other end. m e n . tested binocularly the cfiick raodces the dzferencc b e ~ e e nchese tvvo s h d i and, usually, chooses to be near the fzmiliar one. It does lkewise when given a choice bemeen the famahr b d and one with the strip o~entedat 45 degrees from the horkontal. Thus, with both eyes open, both large and small differences from the familiar srrimulus are detec~ed.If, on. the other band, the ckick is tested using its right eye, with a patch on the left eye, it chooses only betvveen the horizonral and vehcal orientadoas but not bemeen the horizontal and the 45 depee orientatlion. If the fight: eye is patched, ctze chick (using its left eye) chooses h e ~ e e nthe famdiar s.tlimdus and both sf the unfadiar s b u l i , In ather wards, small
MMDS OF THEIR 8 m
differences are no-rj;cedby the left eye and right side of the brain, whereas only larger differences are nodced by the right eye and left side of the brain. The left eye and right side af the bra& of the chick are also specialised to p e d o m sparial tasks, such as &ose used when searching for food, A b a ~ e r yof lateralised brain func~onshas been fomd by Viaor Denenberg at the Taniversi~of Connecticut, USA. fits can also be f-ested monocularly because, as in birds, each eye sends its infornation to the opposite side of the brain. In Denenberg" laboratory rats have been tested (by P.E. Gowell and N.S. Waters) in a task requ_iring tktem to swim in a tank of water and to locate a hidden plagom on. wEch they can sand before behg Gfted out of the 'sswh maze",Rats can learn to locate the platfom using their supesios s p a ~ aabGi;itries. l They o&ent using cues overhead in the roam and on the walls of the: tank. In the monscular tests, the rats were abk to p e d o m this t;zsk well if they were ushg the left eye but not if they were using the ~ g h eye, t The demonsealted involvement: of the right hemisphere in pracessirzg spaIcj:ai infomar-ian is &e same as in chicks and humans. From aese selected examples, it will be seen that &ere is no doubt that aniimais have s~onglylateralised brains and even &at the form of the lateralisadon is very s h a a r to &at of hmans, This is m e even when we compare very different brains, such as birds and The cot-pus callosum of aIs may be gin, as menin genera.tring fateraiisadon. of tioned in the previous secdon, by p e m i h g ifibition of parrs of one hmisyhere by their equivalents in the other hemisphere, but the corpus caUosum is not essendaf I"ar brain. lateritlisa.fioxl. Bkds do not have a cowus caEosurn, but they have swongfy faterdised brains. h animals, as in hmans, &ere are s m c m a l as weU as funcbonal asymme~iesof the brain. Chhpamees and orang-utans have asy etry of the Sylvian fissues, as do humans, In rats, &E: left visual region of the coflex is larger &an its equivalent on the rigbt side, as in humans, In birds
E V O L m G A BMW FOR CQNSGIOI-TSWSS
euies in the orgarrisatioxl of the neurons &at: ~ransmitvisual information, to rhe forebrain, It is now clear that the hypothesised unique relationship b e ~ e e nbrain. lateralisa~on,lanmage and consciousness is incorrect. It may be that consciousness could not have evolved wihout brain lateralisation, ancl this might also be m e for lanwge, but &ere w s no simultaneous evolution of aU of these a ~ b u t e stogeher,
We h o w of no shgle smemre in the brain that is ~ q u e to hmarzs, despite canhual c l a h s that have been made to &is effect at one time or ans&er. We are, it seems, always s e e ~ to g find sornehing about the brain that might make us different from, and superior to, o&er species. &at singles us out. Perhaps it is just more of eve-ing Humans have the largest brain weight rela~veto body weight, the largest neocoaex size relahve ta .clhe rest of the brain, the largest prefrontal coaex and the largest cowus callosw, Perhaps these represent a, special coduence af brain fefeatnsres, out of which cansciousness emerges, or perhaps it is ody a xrraaer of degree that separates us from other species, Ss far, hawever, seareKng far the Zrey to %uuanamess" brain smcmre has sewed mare to dash itlusions about our supefioriw, or simply difference, than to provide canfimarion of &ern.
A number of abitides may have come together with the evolu~onof humans. These proposed characteristries include standing upfight on the feet (i.e. adopdng a bipedal posmre), the abiliq ts pedom fme manipuladon wih the hands, right-handedness, tool use, lanmage, group hunting, the to plan ahead fin1en~ona6@)and consciousness. As we wiU see, many of hese characte~sdcshave also been observed in n,o&uman anhals. Yet, a coming together of all of these abiX-ides may explain the appearance of the f i s t , modem h u a n s , Homo sapielzs, 0.1 million, years ago, The first human-like arn_imals, the aus~alopithecines, appeared an ea& some 4 to 6 &llion years ago, and some say more precisely 4.4 miUion yeam ago, Mthough we do not h o w exaccly in. which region of the vvodd the trarrsidon from nohuman apes to humans rook place, the discovery of fiassils &at are intemediate bemeen chimpanzees and the australopi&eeines in M ~ c asuggests that this is the place where it occuned. Also, analysis of our genezic materid (i.e. the genes) places us closer to the chhpanzees and goriUas of M ~ c athan to the orang-utans of Asia. "Ihe genes are inside the nucleus of everjr cell jn the body and they are passed on from generation to genewrion. They are the building blocks on which. aU, lik forms devdop. Muences from the envirament can ra&caEy affect what genes art: expressed; as rhe molecular hiolo&sts say, they can affect 'the read-out from the gcne-eic code'. Evolution
EVOLUTION OF THE E W M N B M N AN33 MWD
occurs by changes that accumdate over t h e in the genes, rhese changes being referred to as mutadons, All living species share a considerable p r o p o ~ o nof genes (i.e, they have genes that are the same, or almost the same). This is because aU of &ese are basic genes that need to be expressed in aU life forms. T%ey are basic for sufival. These basic genes encode certain proteins that are essen~af to the f u c t i o ~ n gof oar cells and bodies as a whole, Nevefieless, each species has a collection of genes that differs from those of oher species, and those species that have evolved fufier apart from each o ~ e share r fewer of the same genes. The fewer genes shared, the f u d e r apaa are the two species in evolu~onavtime because, begifing from the b e when they separated from each otf-rer, each species slowly accumdates &fferent muta'ritons of its separate gerredc code. We can. use these accmdated mutations as a clock to date when any two species began to evolve separately, Thus, fkom livhg a can obtain idornation that allows us to frace their evolutionaw past* Scien~stscan discover how much gerze~cmaterial is shared b e ~ e e nany two species by mixing their generic material together to see how muck matcbing occurs bemeerr their ~o geneGc codes. 'T'he process is called gem or DNA hybridisation. The genes are s m n g together in sequences like the words in a sentence, although each sentence of genes is a very tong one. 'T'he genetic code of one in&~dual is made up of many such s&gs of genes and thus we fight consider it as a colledan of sentences, some of which wiU. be read out at different b e s in the individual"^ life and in different conteas. m e n gene hybri&sation is carried out, the sentences describing an individual of one species are compared with those describing an individual of anortner species, If we hybridise the genes of a chimpamee and a human, we find a remarkable 99 per cent similarity of the genetic code. We share slighdy less than this with gorillas and 98 per cent with orang-utans. By knowing the rate at which mutations accumulate, we can date the divergence
Million years ago
14113122ItfO9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
O
Orang-utans Gorillas, Chimpanzees
Humans
Fig. 5=1 Evolution of the hominoids, based an DNA hybridisation, This is the most accepted view, but it is not the only one. ft has been suggested that humans branched off after orang-utans and that gorillas and chimpanzees evolved later on their awn divergent branch. This view would explain the fact that although gorillas and chimpanzees use their knuckles when they walk, as did their ancestors, there is no anatomical evidence that the ancestors of humans were knuckle walkers. iin the scheme presented in %he figure, one has to assume that humans lost the knuckle-walking ability of their predecessors,
of the human line of evolution (refened to as the b o m ~ d line of evolution) from orang-utans at about 10 to 12 million. yeam ago, from gorgfas at about 8 &ion. years ago and from chimpanzees at about 4 to 6 maion years ago (Fig, 5.1). There are some inaccuracies in d a ~ n gthe hybri8isarioxl data and we should remember that the e n ~ r o m e n t has a large effect in d e t e m i e g what genes are expressed. This may explain why orang-utans acmally have more
EVOLUmON OF THE m M N B W N AND MNID
physical feames in common with h w a n s than do g o d a s or chimpanzees. Yet, overall, the evidence suggests &at humans are more closely xlated to chimpanzees. Thus, while nohuman primates had spread out h n t . Afhca across Ihe continents through Europe to Soulrl.least Asia and to Sou& h e r i c a , it appears to be hose that smyed in Africa that evolved into hominids. The evoludon of humans o e e u ~ e dat a dme when M ~ e awas cooling and beeomhg drier. There was a major loss of forests and an. increase in grasslands, b o w n as savamah, It has been suggested that this climadc change led to the evolu-cion of humans that walked upright on ~ e i r hind h b s (blipedafiy) and to a change in heir feeding habits from p r h a d y eadng fmit and leaves 'to eaf-ing meat, fi>r which they needed to hunt, This wiU be discussed in more det_ail later, The bipedal gait may have allowed the early h m a n s (hominids) to move more efficiendy aver the grasslands in search of food or other resowces, Beween the time of the first appearance of human-gke axtimals (4.4 d i o n years ago) and the appearance of anatoficafly modem humans, Honzo sapiens, there existed a n u b e r of different species af horninids. Apparentty, these species formed as a cunsewence of climaric changes causing fragmentation of the habitats in which they lived. This caused populafions of haminids to become isolated and &enr to evoke along selparate parhs. The earliest horninid spedes, Austrahpithecus afarenszj. (wEch existed from 3.8 to 2.9 m a i m years ago), is believed to have @ven rise to two major subdivisions of hominids: the gracile Australvpithecus africanus (3 to 2 million years ago), which eventually led ta Home sapielzs; and the robust Paru~thropusor Ausmlopithecus rohsms and Auszratopithecus boisei (2.5 to 1 million years ago), a side b r a d which had becorne extinet by about 1 million years ago (Fig. 5.2). The gracile stock of hominids included Homo habilk (1.9 to 1.5 million years ago), Homo erectus (1.8 to 0.25 million years ago), I"Jomo ne~nderghaZensis(0.12 to 0.04 maion years ago) and archaic Eiomo sapbras (0.4 to 0.09 maion years ago). Home habilis
WNDS OF THEIR 6W
M Sapiens (archaic)
Age 5 2 The evolution of the haminicts, This is a konsensus' view and definitely not the only one that has been proposed (for alternatives see R. Gore, 2997, National Geographic, 191 (21, 72-97). The boxes indicate the approximate periods for which each horninid form existed. Some people prefer not to separate A. boisei and A. robustus and they assign both species to the same genus Paranlhropus. Note the uncertainty of the end point of the period for which Horns erectus existed,
represented the fzsr notable increase in brain size, reladve to b o a size, over apes but even so i t s re1atlve brain size was only half that of Uomo sapiens.
Each of these horninid species evenmally became extinct at one M e or anotfier, Some h o ~ n i d ssuevived for longer than others, probably depending on when they came into competition with later horninid forms with larger brains. m e r e is confroversy abouc exacdy when the vafious hominid forms appeared and died out, and also at what time the various f a m s ~ g a . c e dfrom their apparent birth place in Africa to spread out over Europe, Eurasia, Australia, and so on. A =cent repoa in the journal Science (wiaen by C. Swisher of the Berkeley Geochrondom Geneer, USA, with a number of colleagues) has made a claim, based on dating bone material, that Homo erectus existed in Central Java up to around 27 000 to 45 000 years ago, long after modern Home s a p i e ~ shad evolved. But the repoft needs confxmadon because the age of the Home erecgus s h u s was estimated only kdkecdy by measu~ngthe ages of bovine teeth eoldected from the same layer of e a f i and from alongside the shus. Samples of the s M s were not made ava2able for direct &tinge As c ~ b c sof the repaft arpe, the bovine teeth and the s k d s may have come toge&er by sedirnent drift or some more recendy occudng m ~ r a l phenomenon, raher &an being deposited alongside each s&er because they lived and died at the same rime, In fact, it shodd be noted that aU of the: dates that I have cited for the various h o m ~ d sare es.timarions only. Even when. samples of sh33s are avzgable, inaccuracies resdt from problems izlvolving d a ~ n gthe bone matefial, the fragmenmv namre of the remains that me available ancl a&er taxonomic (classiffcz~orr)issues, Not ody the age but also the dis~bulrionof the v a ~ o u shornfid foms is an e s k a ~ o n wi& , s s a r sowces of inaccuracy, However, it now appears that, al&ough Homo ereceus dispersed widely across the conrinents, it was from the Home ereczzls popdation &at remaked h Mrica that Homa sapkns evolved, and Home sapz'ens then, dispersed from M ~ c ato the rest of the world. As it did so, it must have caused the ex6nczion of the other h o m ~ d sthat it contacted. None of these chronological and anatomical details are
of padcular concern to us here, but they provide us wih a background against which to consider brain evolu~onin the hominids and wi& a basis on which to pose the quesrion, 'When did the hman. brain become the one that we h o w it is today?'. Did brain capacity evolve in complete synchrony with the changes in tbe skeleton that are used to place the various h o ~ n i d sin different species, or were here steps taken by the evolving brain &at occurred independendy of &ese markers of physical evoludon! Did the adopdon of a bipedal posture influence the evolution of the human brain! Mfiough we can e s h a t e brain volme from fossilised shus, haw much does this tell us about the organisahon and fluxlcdon of the evolving h u a n brain? When did ~ght-handedness and tooli using emerge and were they l ~ e dto each o&er? When did h m a n s begin to use lanwage? Was it as recendy as around 30 QQO years ago, as W%am Noble and lain. Davidson have hyporhesiseb? Can we discover anytizhg about the consciousness of hominids from the palaeontological records? I will consider each of these proposed aspects of h w a n evolu~onin. mm. The expmang brah
We b o w that modern h u a n s have the largest brain size reladw to body size, and also the largest neocoaex and prefrontal cortex, of all animals (chapter 4). From the appearance of &e first hominids, the h i n size began to increase steadily, rela~veto the body weight, tvhich w s increasing also. Begiming at around 3.5 million yews ag-o, there was a steady and acceleraring increase (an exponential increase) in the size of the horninid brain, relative to body size, largely due to the increasing size of the neocoaex, as g tilt-! past 2 d i o n years of discussed in chapter 4. D evolu~ort,of the line Home, brain size doubled, The steady increase in brain size was intempted at around 1.5 to 2 million years ago by a % u w ' in the exponential curve caused by a somewhat more sudden
EVOLUTION OF THE W M N B M N A m M
Fig. 5.3 The capacity of the cranium of the horninids increased over evolutionary time. This broad curve encompasses the data from the different specimens of Fossil horninids (as in Fig. 5.2).Note that an increase in cranial capacity occurred around 1.5million to 2 million years aao, followed by a hiatus until about 0.5 miliion years ago when cranium size began to increase rapidly. For more detail see Noble and Davidson, 1996.
increase h brain size (Pig. 5.3). It was at this time that the climate changed drarna~cauy,and it eonhued to Rucmate considerably and aver rela~velyshort periods of time. Forests were last aver just several decades only to remm again. just as fast. WiHiam Cdvjn, a neurapbysiofsgist at the Washingcon School of Medicine, USA, has hypo&esised &at these stvings in climate may have caused the sudden kcrease in the size sf the Home habilis brak by promo~ngthe accumdarion sf rnenal abili~esthat wadd p e r ~ fle~bdiw t of behaviour.
Such fle~biE@would be necessary for survival in the chan@ng clima~econdirions, h increased c a p a c i ~of the brain would have made it ready fbr any new life style that might have been demanded by the changing clhate. There is, however, no direct evidence to suyporf h i s specularion, intereseing rhough it is, It is always t h e n as fact that increasing brain size means increasing c o g ~ ~ vcompleGw e or inteuigenee. In a general sense, at least witrhin one line of evolu~on,this may be somewhat m e , but we must remember that species an divergent branches of evolution may use quite different organisarions of neurons to solve the same problems of ~ behaviour, and size is not always Lhe issue, W i their rela~velysmaa brains, birds can firncfion at cogkrive levels equivalent to &ase of prhacces (chapters 3 and 4). Palaeoanthropologi~ts~who smdy the evolution sf ing fossils, can only obtain. idormation about the shape and size of bones, They can estimate brain size from the size of the cmnium and body size from the skeleton, and it may be reasonably accurate, but they can oslly guess at the level of intelkigence that an extinct brain might have had, The basic assumpsion of this kind of research is that brain size is direcrly and immutably related ta inteageace, 'This assumpdon may be to some extent: k mdiverghg line correct pro\rided that one keeps w i ~ one of evolution, but we will never h o w because integigence l tell us, not brain is somerfiing that ody a living a ~ m a can size. This is the paucity of the homGd fossil record and it is on the u h o w n s and the cracks in the evidence &atJ all too often, our human-cexl&ed views are founded.
Stanang on om hind Embs Did brain size begin to increase as a result of hominids adopting an upright posNre or was it the other way around? No&uman primates move about by using all four limbs, eiiber m move on the pound (e.g. baboons) or to s ~ n in g the mes and lrrnd on hrancks (e.g. many macaque
EVQLWXQN OF THE W M N BRAIN AND iMMD
monkeys and bowler monkeys). In the case of our ntzarest relaeives, the great apes, orang-utans use all four limbs in almost equal amounts as they move through the canopy of rhe midorest. The hip joint of the orang-utsn ailuws the legs to be moved more like ams, whiIe the feet can cling more like hands. Chimpanzees and g o a a s use four limbs likewise when they are moving &rough the Bees but, when moving on the ground, they usually suppm &emsdwes by using both their feet and the knucMes of their hands, m e y are refesred to as buckle waRers'. M1 of the apes are able to walk bipedally on the gromd but they do not do so habimally, as we do. Nso, when apes W& bipeda11y their gait is more laboured &an ours because they cannot extend the knee joint to make a straight leg for stepping out and the& feet have to be placed widely apart. PIXl hominids, except perhaps some of the earliest aus~alopi&eeines,were bipedal. This can be deduced by the smcmre of their feet, hips and p e i ~ ebones and of the joint bemeen the bones of the neck and the back af the SW,as ehe head has to be held at a different angle when the body is in a bipedal versus a quadmpedal smnce. In fact, 3.6 d i o n years ago in the glace we now call Tanzania, three h~rnirtidswalked &rough some fine ash from a volcanic emzption. Their footprints were soon. hardened by sun. and rain and covered by more ash, In a me, the footprints became hssilised. These anciem footprints, &scovered two decades ago, showed that these early humans walked bipedauy, a small one wa&ng alongside a larger one, possibly parent and ck2d hand-h-hand, and anorher f d o w h g in Fibe footsteps of the larger one. Judging by "the size of the cran_ia of skulls of about the same age as the ;footprints, these bipedal aus~alopithecines would have had a brain size about the same as &at of apes. Therefore, bipedalism might have preceded the increase in brain size that was to occur in horninids. Various explanations have been proffered to explain why "spedalism evolved. X have men.eioned already the one about more efficient movement over grasslands. T h e u p ~ g h t
stance would also have allowed bener detecdon of predators on the pound in long pass. It should be noted that some quadrupedal species, such as meerkats and vertret moAeys, adopt a bipedd sance when they are looking for gromd predators. N&ough for an animd m h n g at a fast speed bigedal locomorion is less efficient &an quadmpedal, being bipedal may have chanced the h o e ~ d s b t t a m i n afor ft-acking prey at slower speeds; or, if early hominj;ds were still vegetarian as the smcture of their teeth suggests, they may have used their s ~ m i n ato cover larger distances in search of plant foods or water. In addidon, adophon of the uprigiht posmre w d d have freed the hands for carrying things and for &rowing *em. "TTIus the ho&mids could taw weapons for hmting, babies and vegetables or fmit ga&ered at a distance from the place where they were to be eaten. Bipedalism would also have freed the hands for using tools, altkrough the earliest stone tools appear to have been used well after bipedalism evolved, It is, of course, possible &at tools made of less durable mare~aleoufd have been used by h o m i ~ d swell prior to t h i s clme, as will be discussed later* Accordirzg ta Dean Falk of the State University of New York, USA, bipedaliism may have evolved for heat conwol. By living in open savamah, wiaout the shelter of trrees, the early hominids were exposed to the hot m;idday sun. and, according to Falk, there may have been an evolutionaqy advantage gitimd by standiag up away from the hat refiec~vesubs~areand at an angle that; reduced the swface area of the body exposed to the direct rays of the hot noonday sun. Sanding upright had cemin consequences for rhe brain, which r e q ~ r e sa goad supply of blood. There was a problem in getring bfood to a head held upright high a b o ~ the heart: and also in g e ~ n gthe blood back to the heart: wii&out overloading the main. vein involved, the juplar vein, Thus, along with beco g blIpedal came certain necessary changes h the arrangement: of the blood vessels and blood-cawing sinuses, The human. skull became
covered on its outside and inside s d a c e s with a complex web of communicaring veins. This rearrangernem of the blood vessels of the c r a ~ u mcould also serve to coal the brab. The braisl requjres a considerable supply of energy in order to knctiion, and this creates internal heat (metabolic hear). The heat from the brain, therefcrre, needs to be dissipated, and the blood system that evolved along with bipedalism could be used to do just that. The nerwork of veins could act like the radiator 06 a car to prevent overhearing, Thus, Fa& has armed that the change in the blood supply to the brain may have remaved a major barrier far its expansion in size. Witb its new coofiiag device the brain could grow larger and so generate more heat. Thus, according to Fa1k"s hygo&esis, the change in the vascular system of the brain may have evolved fxrsdy to overcome the gavitational problem of supplying blood to het brain when austrai,lopi&ecines became bipedal, and then could have been used to cool rhe braia in mm allowing the brain to expand. However, oher species have evolved efficient ways of cosling the brain in hot climates (e.g, the nasal cavity of Nubian goats, and of camels and dodeys, acts as a recycEng cooGng device for the brain, and &e ears of the elephant act likewise) and yet they have not s h o w any pahelllar expansion of h e brain along with this. Brain cooling carnot be the only factor &at led to expansion of brain size. There ~ @ be t no singlet ewlanation for the evaludon af bipedalism, and its consequences may not have been. Lififed to a change in the vascular system of the brain, Bipedalism also freed the forelhbs and hands from &eir prerrrous role of s u p p o ~ n gthe body. Hence, bofi hands could be used for cawing, for maxlipula~onof objecls, for ~ c a ~ oAS n .dscussed in. chapter 4, too1 use and for co according to the hypohesis of Finlay and Darlingon this newly acquired use of the hands may, i~self,have been the driving force for expansion of the xreoeortex, Of course, this expansion may have been facilitated by the reamangement of the craml?ialblood vessels h a t had already occumed.
MbWS OF T H E E 0 m
Did hipedsfism also lead to the right-handedness that ates in modern Home s a p k ~ s ?
Handedness is often cited by an&ropolo@sts and psychologists as one of the unique fea'earures of Home sapiens that might refiect o w supehor place in evolu~onand, &erefore, our cansciuusness. Humans are predominantly righthanded. Most of us use the rigbc hand preferendally for mnipuJa61:ng objects, for w ~ ~ and n g o&er acts that require fine movements, Mast of us also use the right hand for and rl.rrorving but3 in fact, the degree of rightin the h w a n populia.fion is not as consistent or quite as seong as we usually think. The hand preferences of individuals vary quite considerably on dfferent tasks, Few of us use the right hand absolutely consistendy for all asks. For example, a person may have a strong right-hand preference for m i ~ n gbut use the left hand for ha or *owing and so an, Despite the fact that it clabed that humans are about 90 per cent right-handed, and h i s is m e far wfi~ng,the handehess of the human popula.fian seems to be nowhere near as swong when a ~ d e range r of aicdvilries wi& the hands is assessed. Recendy, Linda Marchant, of the Uxriversi~of Wami, USA, and her eoileafles Williarn McGrew and kenaas Eibl-Eibesfeldt have used arcE.lival f h s to assess hand preferences in three eaditrional socie.cies: the Giwi San of Botswana, the Elimba people o f Namibia and the Yanomam6 of Venezuela. They scored hand use in a wide s the hands uskg the techrange of a c ~ v i ~ ein-valvkg rriques devdaped by etlhologists to score the behav;iour of als accurately. The results showed the expected rightharrdedness but it was not as seong as the right-handedness that we associate with modern human cdmes. Since the tradidonal people smdied do not read and wite, their weaker right-handedness might be due to not perfarming the acdvie af wfilring, T o put il: the otfier way around, in
EVOLUTION OF; THE W M A N B M N A N D MMD
literate cdmres the use of the ri&t hand for wri~ng may edance right-handedness in other tasks as weU as writing. However, it must be fecognised &at most of the data far literate culmres have relied on people f d ~ n gin questiomaires about their hand preferences and this can give somewhat umeliable resulrrs, No ,ne has yet scored hand use in literate h m g n cu1mres by applybg the same elhalogical tech~questhat Marchant, McC;revv and EiblEibesfeldt used for the rra&.fiisnal culmres. Were that to be done, rhe same weaker degree of rxght-handehess might be fomd in literate cdmres also. There was one f a m of hand use for which the G!wi San, I-fimba and Vanomamb people did show marked ~ght-handedness, and that was tool usiing, They gripped tools &at required fine ma~puladonwith the right hand. Rght-handedness appears to have been associated with tool using from the earliest b e at w ~ c hstone tools were used by hmaxls. Nicholas To& looked at the way in which the fracme paMems occurred on stone flakes made by early humans (Horn h&li's and Homo grgctus). The flakes were made in the manufacme of stone axes or f l i n ~for c a ~ n g , Toth concluded 'chat the stone smck to produce flirts must k have been held in the left hand while it wgs s ~ c from above by a stone held in the ~ g h thand, The fracme paaems fined togeaer in such a way that each s e e would have produced a new flake as the rock held in the left hand was roared clocbise rela~veto the blows with the er held in the ri@t hand. Mthough en contested on the gromds that might have been from below ra&er &an from above, and t been used, 1 am herefore rhe opposite hand ~ & have most interested here in the conclusion that he reached, as follows: ' . . . early h o m i ~ dtool-maGng pogda~onswere preferen~afiyright-handed, a trait characteris"cic of modern humans bwt W Other species, This arpes for the development of a profound latesalisa~anof zhe h a m i d brain by 1.% to 1.4 million years agoVToa, 1985, p, 61 1). Handedness refiects speciatisatJon of the hemispheres
MWDS QF THEIR o%W
(each h e ~ s p h e r econ~olsthe hand on the opposite side of the body) and it is an aspect of brain lateralisa.rion, d;iscussed in chapter 4. Thus, To& made an assacia~on bemeen brain lateralisafion, haxldedness and tool use, He suggested that handedraess may have evolved in h m a n s due to selec~vepressulces to make tools and to use &em, Then another link was added to the brain !at-eralisaliionhandednesetool-using chaivl of associations, and that was lanwage. If was implied that clanseiousness is also associated with &ese characteristics. As men~anedin. chapter 4, lanmage and speech are functions of the left h e ~ s p h e r e Hence, . the left hemisphere is specialised for coneosng the r;iQzht hand, and tool use by that hand and for communication using l a w a g e , Some anhropologists have posMateted that co gesmres preceded the evoludon of speech and &us fighthandedness and tool use preceded lanwage and led tu specialisa~onof the lee hemisphere for Iarzmage, B ~ e r s have suggested that designation. of the left hemisphere for lanmage came first and ri&t-handehess fotlowed. Yet o&ers have gone as far as to speculate &at language and the manufacmre of tools may use veq shilar e o g ~ d v e processes. While there may, indeed, be s h a a r or associated brah mechanisms for harrdedrress, tool use and lanmage, it is now clear that they did not evolve t o g e ~ e r ,Handedness evolved very early in, animals. Even toads have handedness, or perhaps it should be called pawedness. Recent experiments in %be laborat-ory of h g e l o Bisztzza and Giorgio Vatlo~gara at the University of Udine, Italy, and by b d r e w Robhs in my laboratory at the Universiw of New England, Australia, have shown that some species of toads t to wipe a small piece of paper prefer to use the ~ g h paw from the snout or to push a d pivot Lfiernselves to &e sudace of water when they bave been mrned over and the percentage of toads prefer~ng submersed, A&-ttedy, to use the I1.ight paw is less &an the percentage of humans rhat are right-handed, and some toads bave no preference,
EVOX,UTIOH OF THE H U M N B
but the bias towards fight-gawedness is sig~ficant,This result suggests at forelimb preferences h g h t have been as ancient as ehe first s &at moved out of water on to land, In fact, h b nces might even, have evalved amongst the fishes, before amphibims (e.g. toads). Some species of fish show biases to swim in a particular direction of mrning, For example, when &ese fish see a predator almost af3. of &em nxrn in the same direction, eirher lefmards or r i g b ~ a r d sdepending on the species. Nso, Wchael Fine and his colleagues in Virginia, USA, have reponed that channel caash prefer to rub the right fin against the pectord spine in order to produce a pulsahg sound, This behaviour is equivalent; to handedness. Pawedaess s c c m in other species too. One smdy has repofled that dogs prefer to use the right paw to wipe away sticking tape Gom their eyes, not a very pleasant expe;i.iiment, ?%ere are more smdies of paw preferences in cats, and they indicate that cats prefer to use -the left paw to reach for and grab food or movhg objects. Some species of birds have foot preferences. Most pasrots and cockatoos, for example, prefer to hold food h the left foot. In fact, I have fomd h a t sulptzm-crested cockatoos are so swongly left-footed for holding food -that X have yet to See a right-footed one, al&ough f am swe &at some right-footed ones do exist, The footehess of some species of bkds is as swong as ar even stronger than. the handedness of humans. Prima~s,too, have handedness, despite earGer claims char they did not. It used to be &ought &a, in any species ate, some in&viduals have a left-hand preference and o&ers a right-h~ndpreference and at these balance each orher out so that there is no overall bias, or handedness, in the popda~on.That is, prirnates were rhougXlt to have no&ing agn ta the right-handedness of humans. Such a 50:50 c l i s ~ b u h nof hand preferences is, in fact, characteristic of rats and mice, but not of pGmates. As Jeamette Ward of the University of Memphis, USA, has shown, among the lower prirnaes (the oncs h a t evolved first,
MMDS
THEIR O W
lemurs and bushbabies), left-handedness predominates for g i c h g up and manipda.lling food o b j e c ~According , to the hypohesis of Peter MacNeilage, some of the mokeys are left-handed, whereas the ages have a tendency to be ~ght-handed. He hypo&esised that the fight hand of psimates is the strong hand and that it is used for h o l h g onto branches while the left hand is used far reaching for hod and taKng it to the moua to eat, as in the lower prbates- Accordhg to this hypothesis, once primates became a iide more bipedal, as h the case of the apes, the right ha& was freed from Irtavhg to support the body and codd be used ta manfpulak objects. The left hand is better at gabbing moving objects and the right is beuer for manipulation.. This seems to be true f"or many species. m i c h hand gets used h a part;ic.ular simarion depends on whe&er aecwcate mabbing or fine manipdadon is required, There is still debate about handedness in apes, For example, ehhpanzees raised in cap&vi.tqr appear to be right-handed, &e hmans, whereas wild ones may not have a popda~fionbias for use of one hand over the other, at least aeeor&ng to the obsemations of Waiarn McGrew and Lkda Marchant, It seems that hand preferences ~ g h be t modiged by the amomt of pracdce at clhbing, contact with h m a n s and the name af the task bekg pe~ormed by the hands. To illus~ateThe last point3 Gisela Kaplan and 1: have smdied hand preferences in orang-utans in Sab&, East Malaysia, and found that, al&ough &ere was no bias for all orang-utans to use the same hand to hold and manipulate food, &ere was a very smng population bias for Them to use the left bhand to ma~pulatepass of their face, for example, to clean the teeth, nose or ears. Humans, qparenrly, show the same left-hand prekrence to touch the face, This fmding af left-handedness in. orang-utans is important because it demonsuates that arangutans have a lateralised brain !like h m a n s and &at the strength of this handedness is equivalent to that of humans. It also shows that handedness is not a uniraq ckarac.feliis.tic
EVOLUTION OF THE mi"vSNB
that appears in all tasks but, rather, it may be present for one rype of hand using and not ano&er. In chapter 4, I discussed some of the now quite efiaus.five evidence for lateralisarion of the brain in animds. M of this idornation on arrhrsls has been aeemulating over the last WO decades but, rsr&er surprisingly, little of it appears to have been taken into account by anthropologists. By the h e that Toth stated &at right-handedness was a wait characterrsric of modern humans and no other species (quoted previously), lateralisation of the brain and firotedness in birds had been well ddocmernted. From tkeir human-ceneed perspecbve, an&opologists are, of eaurse, not fnterested in birds, and it was not u n a l987 that MaeNe2aige and his coau&ors pubfished their paper on tes. However, even .that and the fl handebess in. g of repofls on handedness in p ates that followed were ignored by Richad Leakey in his. book me Oe@ns of Hamankind published in 5 994. He still clahed handehess, lanwage and tool use are unique to hmans, as seen by the foU1owing quotation: Ai&oagh indiividud apes are pr-eferen~auy right- or lefthanded, there is no populaion preference; modern h m a n s are u ~ q u ein this respect. TOWS& s c o v q gives us an imponat evolu~onasyinsight: some 2 mBion years ago, the brak of Home was heady becornkg truly ksman, in the way h a t we know ourselves to be. (Richard LceaE;ey, 1994,
P* 41) These words demons~atehow one field of science can ipore ana&er and how reluctanay favourite eheo~esare discarded, Even w i ~ one n field there can be bfind spots: the au.Ehors, ment-ioaed previously, who mote abotrt the laterdsed fin use in c a ~ s bstated incomeeay that primates and other als lack handehess, even. ~ a u g hit; was e h e the paper was w ~ t t e n . well b o w Q ~ e people r have recagxlised &at lateralisa2rion of the braitn, and haadedness are not: uni hmans, but have axempted to keep alive the &eor g h m a n evolution
LWNDSOF THEIR O m
to lanwage and lateralisat~onby claiming &at latleralisadoxz in humans is greater &an in a ~ m a l s .This is not so. We aheady b o w that chickens are just as stxongly lateralised as we are, and that they have lateralisation. of just as many fwnctiuns as we do. Footedness in some species u f pamorsl is also as s ~ o n gas handcdness in humans, At the h e &at Michael CorbaBis mote his book The bps&d Age (published in 19"3), he may have been correct in, saying &at handedness in nodurnan primates is weaker &an the hmdehess of humans, but the handedness of orang-utans for touching the face is, in. fact, as swsng as the handedness of Izmans. Therefore, f da not agee with the follawhg statement: 'The crihcal even% that sshqed our handedness must &erefore have taken place since tbe time &at the split bemeen humans and chbpamees oecu~ed" (Michael Corbdlis, 1991, p, 99). Mso, 1 ~ i & that rather .too muck emphasis is placed an handehess. It is only one manifestadon. of brain la~era5sa~sn. There are many other foms of laterdisation and these too are not exclusive to humans el.cher in kind or degree, Over a wide number of species (repdies, birds, rodents and prhates including hmans), the left hemisphere is specialised to process and make the vocalisarions epic& of the species and the fight hemisphere is used to assess sparjlal positions of objects and to eonasl emo~oxtal behaviour. Thus, being handed or having a lateralised brain are not ~ q u characte~slcics e of humns-hey are nor hhatef_yassociated with fanwage or the End of consciousness which i s present in h
Tool using may requke a special aspect of handedness, In hmans, tool using &at requires fine conaol wih the fingers in what is refened to as a precisicm. grip (as opposed to a power g ~ g isj predominantly carsied out by the right hand. f have unen~onedafseady that To& presented some evidence that early humans had made Riints by hol&ng a stone
EVOLUTION OF T E E H U M N B W N AND MWD
er in the right hand and s~iikingit against the stone from which the fiints wodd come, heid (allmost cemidy in a power grip) by the left hand. lo addition, most prehistoric stone axes are made for right-hand use. Perhaps the sane hand was preferred because axes and orher tools could then be shared, or perhaps it was easier to learn how to make a tool if it was an exact replica o f the protowpe ratber than the mirror image. Both hypotheses have been put forvvard by archaeologists. The extensive evidence for handedness in p many o&er an.imals shows &at handedness e before tool using, Despirc3 this, it does remain passible that tool using edanced r.ight-handedness far the reasons that the archaeologists have suggested, The C/wi San, Himba and Uanomam8 people were most saongly right-handed when they were usixzg tools and this is likely to be m e for other human culmres, given &at we consmet scissors, saws, po& for poming and most other tools so that they can only be used effecrivdy when. bdd by rhe right hand. Some researchers lixl this field have implied that righthandedness in tool using is u ~ q u eto humans, and they cite evidence at &ey have coIlected for hand preferences in wild chbpanzees fishing for termites (descfibed in chapter 3). William McGrew and Linda Marchant scored the hand in which the chhpamees held the piece of w i g when they were i n s e ~ n git into the termite mound, Of the fifteen individuals that they scored, six had left-hand preferences for holding the mig, five had right-hand preferences and four had no hand preference. Thus, there was n o ~ n g equivalent to the right-hande&ess af humans in taal ushg, Sbiiar use of a probing tool has been scored in a small group of capdve South herican, eapucfiin. mo&eys (&bus apella) and most of t;fiese used the left hand to hold the probe. W3d ckmpamees also use tools to crack open nuts, as explabed in chapter 3, and they usually hold the ha in the left hand. Y ~ m a mSu@yama and csfteapes from K y ~ t gU ~ v e r s i v ,Japan, found that adult chimpanzees at
Bossou in West Mfica held the ha er stone by preference in the left hand, whereas j u x d e s in. the same g o u p used ei&er the left or right hand and &us had no group preference (i.e. &ere was no handehess in the juve~les). This result suggests &at the consistent le&-hand preference in addts is learnt and it may be related to more success in c r a c b g the nut when the hammer is hdd in the left hand. Like chbpamzees, eapuehins use the left hand ta hammm nuts, but they use the right hand to use leaves as a sponge. These con~11.adictot.ydata on hand preferences indicate that we need to cotleet a lot more dormaeion on hand preferences in tool uskg by bo* wild and capdve p~mates,and to take the age of the subjects into account, behre we can draw any eomXusions about the u~queness, or ohe&se, of h w a n right-handedness in tool uskg. Msa, one can. ody assme &at h m a a s would use the r;ight hand to insefl a ~g into a hole to fish for t e r ~ t e s . This has, however, never been tested, As discussed in chapter 4, in a very ~ d range e of species the right hehsphere (which con~olsthe left hand) is specialised to p e d ~ r mtasks that rely s n spahal infamafian. As a consequence, right-handed humns are quicker and more accmate al reaching out to grab a moving object with the left hand. On &is basis, we might pre&ct: that hmaazs, as well as chimpanzees, vvavld be more accwate at insedng the wig they use the into the hole, ushg spadal i d o m a ~ o n when , left hand ra&er than the right, The impoflant &% to m a s w e ~ g h be t accuracy, rather &an which hand is used more often. UdomnateIy, this has not been done for humans or cEmpanzee so, ir wodd be impoflant to $0 the s c o ~ n gat the beg stages of pedoming fhe task t as because, with prachce, the right hand ~ g h become accurate as the left, The xight hand of both chhpanzees and humans ~ g h r be better at manipdaring the wig using fine finger movements (cornofled by the left h e ~ s p h e r e )and, of course, t h i s ahiFi@ could he usefu-1 in cemin aspects af temitc fishhg, such as m ~ n or g moving the twig around d e n
EVOLmXQN OF THE W M N BMlbT AND MMD
it is in the hole or bt-inging the t-emite-laden twig to the r n o u ~ Thus, , .there may be a tl-ade-of beween -the hands to be used in this task: berter abgiw to hsert tfie wig wi& the left Ethad rdght be balanced against b e ~ e rmarxipulaliion of it with the right hand. The choice to use the left or fight hand rnay depend on the species ar on past expe~ence and have no&ing to do with being an, anha1 as opposed to a h m a n , as some have clahed, The right-handediness of h m a n s and, indeed, of capuchh mo&eys in certah tool-using tasks may be more to do with what idormatrion they are using to process the task &an somehhg unique about eieher species, In nut crachng, the left hand may be used because spatial aspects are impamnt for s ~ k i n gthe nut, but the nut is posirioned on the anvil ready for the s ~ k eby the right hand, the one specialised far fme ma~pulafioxl. Many examples of tool using by various species of als were described in chapter 3, Tool using is not exclusive to h m a n s but, of course, we use a peater vadefy of tools in more complex ways, This rnay be a refleeeon of our more higMy evolved brahs and it rnay also have been axle of a n m b e r of factors that> somehow, drove the evoludon of a more cornpiex a d larger brain. Homo habilis was making stone tools around 2 million years ago. S h a v flakes and the stones from which they were chipped have been fomd, The flakes appear to have been used to cut plant material or meat, or to manufacmre other tools, such as d i g b g sticks. If &is was the first appearance of tool use by h o h ~ d g it , coincided with the ra&er sudden increase in brain size mendoxzed earfier, but it is possible that earlier hofni~dswere using took made of less durable materials, Thus, Homo habilis might have been the fist hornifid to use stone tools, bumnot the fimt horninid to use tools as such. There may, of course, be some.thhg special about ushg stone tools but X suspect that this would be region specific. In c e ~ a i npafis of the world it may be most impoaant, and only possible, to use one End of tool and in other regions ano&er kind of t-ool.
MINDS OF THEIR O W
Thus, Home erectus in. the Nihewan Basin of Chha developed simple stone tools, whereas Homo erecms in Sou&east Asia rnay have specialised in tools mandacmred from bamboo, which leaves no archaedo@cal Face. 'Ikere is no"thing to say wkch kind of tool mate~ai, stone or sorneahhg iess durable, requires a higher cognidve capacity, altfr;tough the weight of ~ & n . g in archaeolaggt is on the side of stone tools. Nor, in, my opisrion, does (stone) tool m a ~ n gsignal the appearance of consciousness. Ceaainly, to make a tool r e q ~ r e sglamiing ahead, and hiis depends on at least one aspect of consciousness, but plamhg ahead can also be r &at do not leave archaeoma~festedby o ~ e behaviows logical records. T o link the appearance of hten~onaliv ( p l a ~ n gahead and behaving with a purpose in mhd) to the appearance of swne tools is, X believe, mistakedy based on what manufacmed objects leave an archaeological record, Moreover, the same plaming ahead is required to make a wooden tool as to make a stone one, and to make one tool as to make many, In. chapter 3 abe abfiir;y of c a p u c ~ nmokeys to make tools from bamboo was discussed and, toge&er wirlnt rhe now extensive examples of tool manufacmre and use by apesz this suggests that tools made of pe~shablematerials were being used we'if before h m a n s evolved, The step made by Homo habilis to make e ~ e a stone l tools rnay not have been particularly unusual. It was not m61 much later that Homo ereelus began to mmufacme symmemical tool forms that were often fashioned around fossilised shttlils in the rock. These decorated stone handaxes might have simalled the first appearance of ahstic regresenlation in horninids or, as some arg;ue, they might have been ornmenred merely by chance due to the possible ways of fracnrring rocks with ksslils in them. Scep~cismand debates abound, but they must now take into account the evidence that the abaiw to form mental represemations evolved well before: h m a n s (see chapter 3). Moreover, the kind of planning ahead that must characterise the making of tools also evolved weU
EVOLUTION OF 'SHE W M A N I J M N AND M N D
before hmans, as shown by tool manufacme in wild chimpanzees and orang-utans, in particular. T d using does not appear to have been, in itself, particularly associated with the expansion of the horninid brain, From its appearance around 2 milgon years ago it developed extxt.emely slowly, with the devdopment of a tool kit at 1.5 mitlion years ago, and there was no other major advance un.@ around 300 000 years ago wit% the development of carved spears of beaudM shapes. Tool ushg does not appear to be ei&er a reflecGon of or a &ving force for the enlargement af the human brain, a l ~ a u g hit ~ g h t have had a s@omgerreladonsh_ipto a subregion af the brain.
"cadan in animals share Although same forms of , as far as we b o w no some aspects of human l form of a ~ m a lcommu~cadonis as flexible, crearive or complex as human lanwage. We should recawse, however, that this opinion may have been reached because we h o w too fitrle af any form of co u n k a ~ o nin a ~ m a j s ,This remains an open possibiliq but not one that can be resafved here. We do h a w , however, that bird song has surprising si~larri.riesto human language in terms ;both of its develapme&rt and complexiq, In many species, including frogs, bkds, rodents, monkeys and hmans, the left hehsphere is specialised for cammunicaliun by vocalisations (chapter 4). One impuaant characteristic of the brain concerned wit21 the comprehen-. sion of fanwage and the proherion of speech by h m a n s is the gearer invhernent af areas in the left h e ~ s p h e r e ~ right hemisphere, If a person has a s ~ o k e compared w i the -that causes damage to the left hemisphercz, the inabiliq to speak or to understand lanmage may result depending un exactly which region(s) of the brain is (are) darnaged. In most people, here are ~o major regions, called Broca" area and Werxlicke" area (Fig. 5.41, in h e left hemisphere &at are concerned with speech and language, Broca" area is
Wernicke's area
Fig. 5,4 A view of the left side of the human cattex showing 'the regions involved in speech and language, Broca's area and Wernicke's area.
hvolved in speech praducfion and Wedcke" sin the comprehension, of lanmage. The Sylvian fissure, wKch can be seen as a groove on the sudace of the brain, is longer and posi;rioned lower an the s d a c e of the left hemisphere &an ects tfie presence of it is on &c right. This asy h e ~ s p h e r eonly. The Sylvian fissure is cal also h the orher apes and some species of which may suggest precursors to h w a n laneage. As the left hefisphere is specidised for produchg and processing the e simds of a n u b e r of litnjmal species, it wodd seem &at the areas of the h w a n brain involved in. language and speech may have evolved from eq~valentareas m e r e are also o ~ e anatomical r as humans, other apes and mokeys, In apes and Old World
ON OF THE W M N B W N APTD MWD
monkeys, as in humans, the left occipital lobe of the coaex (at the back) is larger than the right and the right frontal lobe is larger than ehe left. It is possible to idencify the presence of Broca" area in a brain by the arrangement of the ovedyirng Gooves (sulci) on the surface of the bain. 'lhese sulci leave impressions. on the inside surface of the s W , Thus, by exanrining- the skulls of the exher early hominids it should be possible to determine when a discinct Broca's area migbt have evolved and to deduce f o m this when Xanmage might have f i s t appeared. Dean Fa&, menrioned earlier, li>und evidence chat Broca" area was present in Home h a ~ l i s2 million years ago, Fak nzade cranial edocasts of skulls of ates and h a d ~ d s ,This involved fdling the inside cavit); of the SWwith latex rubber and removing it after it had set, The procedure gves a model of the brah &a?: was in the s w l , and the sulci on its srrdace can be seen, al&ough not always with great clariv. Using this me&od on a skull of Home habihs b o w n as m M ER 1470, colleaed from Kenya and &ought ra be around 2 maion years old, Fa& was able to see evidence of Broca's area, 01: course, presence of a brain region is not c~nclusiveevidence that it was, in fact, used for speech. h chapter 4, I menGoned that neurons that process a u ~ t o r y signals (sounds) can grow into and take over the main retjiion of the cortex usually devoted to processing visual idornation, if blindness s e w s from birth. Thus, the fuac~ons of: padeular regions of the brain are rather flexible, and they can change if an abnomalli~occms during early development of the brain, Therefore, Broca's area, or what looks like it from the ra&er cmde impression made on the skdl, codd, perhaps, have been used for some furrc~ono&er than speech. n i s is what Waiarrr Noble and Xain Davidson, of the University of New England, Aus~ralia,thik. They beGeve &at language appeared much more recendy &an 2 mglion years ago, In their opinion, language was only s ~ h n gto make its appearance as recenfly as 100 000 to 70 006 years ago, when h m a n s
might have been builBing boats to make plamed migradons (e.g. h a m Asia to Australia), and that it was defi~tely present only as recendy as some 32 000 years ago when humans were making symbolic representadons in bone and stone (see later). These dates for the or?igin. of lanwage can be only reasoned wesses. It has to be recog~sed&at the existence of Broca's area in HOW ha&fis makes it disfinctly possible &at humans were, in fact, using lansage 2 mifion years ago. Maybe it was a mdhentslq form of language but, if so, why was Broca" area so well developed &at it left a recognisable impression on the skdl? There is a stronger piece of evidence against the hypo&esis that the Broca" a r a present in brahs 2 million. years ago was used for some funcrian o&er &an speech. Although, as 1 have said, ohe dmelopi~gbrain has remarkable flexibi&@,ailowing one region to take an ffie funcl-ion of anorfier if some abnsrmali~occurs (e.g. blindness), this is not ss for the evolvi~gbrain, Evoludon and development are often confused. Comparative neuroanatomists, who compare the smcmres and funcrions of .the brain h different species, are always impressed by che consewarion of smct-ure and furzcdon across species. Of course, there are dfferences bemeen species but evolufionary eomecfions can be made. For example, once a pahcdar disGnct re@on of the brain has evolved to have a pa;Aeular visual. frxnc~oxl (e.g. for derrdng moving visual s h u l i and locating their position), it tends m resin that fmcrion as evolu~on proceeds and new species form. During the course of evsludon the function may be m o ~ e d ,and perhaps improved, but basically the designaeon of thaf region to perform a particular funftion is retained. Only if an abnomality occurs during the development o-f the brain might the function of a particular region be switched to something other than the role that it has been assigned by evolu~on.What does this mean for Broca" area in H ~ m o kubilz's? X would say that, if it was nut deSigmed for speech
EVOLUTION OF TEE HUMP*.; B M N AND
as we h o w it in modern humans, it was used for somehing very close to it* The abiliry to speak requires not ody the appropriate regions of tlze brak but also the conect apparams to produce the sounds, It mast be possible to mwe the t o n p c into the comect positions, and the f a q m (voice box) must: be in the ~ g h place. t In apes the larym is positioned higher up in Lhe neck and they cannot make speech sounds. The law= had to descend in the neck before h o f i ~ d scould make speech sounds. Then: is conmversy about when that oceuned. Some say that it happened as recendy as 30 000 years ago and orhers &at it happened much earlier, in Homo habilis, Yet others have reasoned that the t o n p e is more important for speech than the l a v m and that Homa erectus bad the tonf,fue muscles amched to the jaw bone in a mamer that would have pemitted speech. There is no solution to this controversy, but it should be noted that birds that mimic h m a n speech produce speech sounds with a vocal apparams endrely different from that of hwans. Sea lions can also produce speech-l&e sotmds. h other words, there may be ways around m a b g the vocal apparams work to produce speech sounds even if it: is not easy or perfect and as long as the brain has developed the capaeiq to confro1 speech. It remains possible that Home hbilis of 2 mjJIfionyears ago d g h t have been bob spe&ng and maGng tools. Indeed, he or she might have been s p e a h g about making tools. It may be pure coincidence, but the regions of the brain &at cone01 the mouth, movements of speech are located right next to those that conwoX. the hands, Some people have a r p e d that, speech and hand use evolved "hand-in-band" with each other. Co u ~ c a b o nby means ight also explah this association. Even in s of today, hand gesmes s c a r w i speech ~ and they follow the same r h m m as speech, h Home sapkns speech and fine conaol of the hands are closely related to each azfier, but: that does not mean they evolved at the same time,
MenM representaaatls and art The abiliv of bo& a~ma2sand humans to f o m mental representadons was &scussed in chapter 3. h humans, mental representations may be expressed in art foms. The earliest symbolic art f o m ~of humans &at have been m e a f i e d from European sites date back to a mere 32 000 to 40 000 years ago, although recent finds of rock art. in Aus~aliaby Rickard FuUagar of the Aus@alian Museum and colleagues may set this date back to about mice as many years ago. The l a ~ e rfmding is a mat-cer of coneoveny in archaeological ckcles, depending on the me&od used to date the samples. Irrespec.trive of this debate, the expression of art in durable media is a rela2ively recent development af the h m a n species. On the grounds that language is a symboEc co mica2ion system, Noble and Davidson. reason &at the or;igin of 1anl;uage is also recent and &at it coincided with the appearance of these spbolic art forms, There are at least two pieces of evidence against this hypotEresis, First, as &scussed stlready, Broca's srea of the brain was present well before the appearance af the symbolic art forms. Secondly, prj.or to this me, here may have been less durable symbolic art: foms, such as weaving or caning of so& wood, in which humans expressed their internal representa~oas,These would not have srxmived to be discovered by the archaeologists of today. Archaeologsts of Western culmres rely on art foms that are tlxpressed in rnaeriaXs h a t persist, such as carwings in bane, ivory or rock or painkgs on rack, whereas, even today, many art foms are expressed in rransienr: media. T"he arrcient Japanese art form of ikebana (flower amangemeat) is not less aesthetic or symbolic because it is ~ansient. In fact, its very ~ransienceis pan of its synrrbolisn. We eamot h o w whether OUT human ancestors used such art forms, as they leave no tangible trace. Likewise dance and song may have been used as symbolic expression well prior to the making of sculpmres and paintings. Perhaps they were a logical progression from displays in animals. Might
EVOLmXON OF THE W M A N B
not we tki& of h e rxmaGsed "ancirrghf a~nrrals(catXed u n i c a ~ o n m fcourse, one could displays) as symbolic c a r p e &at: .fhe displays of animals are not iaten~onalforms u~cation,and that is l&ely to be correct for some species (e.g. the honey dame af bees) but perhaps not for other species, meree: one might draw the line on inten~onality in displays is more a rnaMer of opinion &an substantive fact3 and &at wodd be m e for Zhe displays of h is not, as some ha it might be that humans can hold men for longer and do more w i &ern ~ (e.g. compare one: with anotha) &an can animals, This is not yet bown. There is some evidence that the frontal lobes (which lioned in chapter LF3 as contain the prefrontal cofiex, Xian canex are used for well as Broca" area) of the ma for keephg &em in ng mental representahoa mind to w i d e behaviour, Of cowse, this is not likely to be the only Euxlcdan af the frontal lobes, but it could be a most impofiant one for the kind of consciausness &at aUows p l a d n g ahead and dealing with symbols, It is well h o r n &at people wha have had frontal l o b o t o ~ e s(severance of the frontal lobes &om the rest of the brain, used as a ~ g h l ydubious aeament for depression) experience disrurbances of amntion and innpaired abiliv m plan ahead. T"hey may also show a "a~enhg' of emotional seaGcions and changed, some~meshapprspli-iate, social interaclions. At this rime, it would be ~ s l e a d i n gto say &at fhe funcPions of the frontal lobes are known with any degree of ce~fainty but the indications are sufficic3nt for m a h g speeula~ons. Compared with chose oE other p tes, the frontal lobes of h m a n s are very hrge. F& has used the cranial endocasts of horninid shlls to look at tfie size of the frontal lobes relative to the rest of the brain, and she has concluded &at there- was a pahcdarly drarnaris enlargement of .the f r o n ~ lobes l in the evolu~onof tht: Homa line f;o modern, hmaras (Fig, 5.5). The convolu.tians of the frontal lobes
A
Frontal lobe
Fig. 5.5 The frontal lobes of a chimpanzee (A) and a human (B). Note that t"rh frontal lobe of the human is larger in proportion to the rest of the cortex than is the frontal lobe of the chimpanzee
increased as the size of the frontal lobes increased and %hey were detectable from thdr hpressions on h e S W . Maybe this anatomical change to the brain reflects the evolut-ion of the h m a n ab2iries of ment;il representation and conded that "bigger is sciousness but we are, once agafn, re be~er-S an assump~onm d &at we camot prove &is wi& foss2 material. Nor can the abiliw to make mental representations be exclusively ~ e to d the frontal lobes, In birds ano&er part of I b e brain must be used to farm Gsual representa~orts
EV8LmIOP;i 0 1E:THE H U M N B M N AbXD MMD
as, for example, can be formed by young chicks. This ability of young chicks might be vestigial compared with human abili~esto f o m mental representations but the fact that it occurs in the absence of any frontal lobes is of iaerest. Also, until the recent experiments &at I discussed in chapter 3, no one would have credited birds, particularly such young ones, with the abiliw to form mental repreals ~ g h force t us to sentaitions. These resuI~sfor a differendy about h m a n s , Ceminly, there might have been a so-calIed 'creative explosion' hat: occuaed in bumans 30 QOO to 40 000 years ago or, at least, there was a cdmral sbifi: m eqress mental representations in nonperishable h m s . Mthough rbjs must tell us s o m e ~ i n gh p o a a n t about h m a n s and tlneir c d m e , X suggest that it is not an event on w ~ c hto pin "ihe appearance of eiaer larz~ageor consciousness. This time might, however, have been important for the flowering of fanpage, c d m e and consciausness.
In chapter 2, X discussed the topics of mind-reading and deception and haw they can. be used to advantage h social simaeions, These behaviours are not mique to humans. There is some evidence chat chimpanzees cm a ~ b u t e&nd states to others (to members of their own. species and to humans too) and &ere is also evidence suggesbng &at tac-ticd deception may occur in many species. Home sapielzs m y , of course, make greater use of these ~ c t i c s&an does any oxher species. According to Alison Jolly and Nicholas Humphey (discussed in e h a p ~ r 31, higher inteibgence evolved with increashg social cornp l e x i ~ ,The evolu~onof consciousness may be associated with this. Human so~ieCiesarc seen as the most sociaUy complex of all, and hence we consider ourselves to be both more intelligent and more conscious than o*er species. Many anthropologists believe that consciousness must have
developed somewhere in the Homo line of evolurion, but how convincing is &e evidence for this? One may speczllae that consciousness emerged when Ihe brain. took a leap fomard in size and the neocortex developed a sufficient degree of complexit-y but this is, kdeed, pwely specdadon. Consciousness can o d y be measured either by looking at behaviour or by listerzing to what anotfier person says. As we have seen, we can look at the behaviow of livhg species and try to assess w h e ~ e r they have consciousness, difficdt thou& that might be. We do not have this kind of access to the behaviour of the now e x ~ n c ht o r n ~ d s By . exanni~ng&e traces of &ek life style and the relics &at they have left behind, we can m ~ k e same deducrions about their level of skills and, w i ~ reserva~ons,we c812 deduce somehing about their iateuigence, Can we tell anwing about their cansciousness? h&opologists have asked when it was that h o ~ n i d s started to t f i E ~about the %me. Burying bodies could be taken as an indiea~onof consciousness of s o m e ~ x l goccurGng in the fume. Supers~fionsthat are part of the nmal of buqixag involve trhifixrg about events or images in ano&er time and place. They are the xnadestatiion of a certain kind of consciousness. However, al&ou& supers ~ ~ or o n religion is a major aspect of burial in all modem humans, this may not have been the case when burial first became a pracdce of the hominids. Burial also serves to cover over decaying maMer and thus may have represented a sfsaighff~mard biological advantage that later became As such, burying may, in the associated with supersG~oxas* first place, have been very little different from .the b w k g of bones by dogs, awms by squirrels or: seed by the storing birds that X discussed in chapter 3. Mso, worker bees remove the bodies of dead drones from the hive. Evidence chat b u ~ a loccumed does not, uunfomnately, tell us that humans did, in fact, w o w about the fumre, al&ough some anthropologists have assumed that it does. The first burials have been a ~ b u t e dto the Heander&aXs, w ~ c hexisted 0.12 ~lltjion,to 0.04 maion years ago,
EVQLmIQN QF TEE H U M N B u m AND Mnt'D
as a side branch of the Home line of evolutJon. that did not lead directty to Home sqiens. Some an&opologistr; contest this early date for bu~als,clahixlg that apparent burial may sintply haw happened by accident when, for example, a cave roof fell in on a sleeping Neandefial, If so, burial appearred mu& more recendy in the hominids. s began to taw out hespecGve of when ho tells us something deliberate b u i d s md wheh about the appearance of s u p e r s ~ ~ oinn hominids, I do nor believe that it signals the begking of bekg able to plan ahead, Nor do I beGeve &at planAng ahead appeared as late as making. boats to migate, as Noble and Davidson d 3, examples &at may indicate have said, In chapre= \.yere discussed. It wodd be planning ahead by a unwise to pin the rise of consciousness to the archaeological irrdicarians of planning for the hmre.
What can we conclude? T o draw generd conclusions from scattered hfomacion based on ai number of assump~ansis always sky but I believe that it can be said that- tool using, language, c d ~ e , social complexie, hi@ intefligence and consciousness all came together with she evolutJon of h w a n s , Not one of these characterisrics appeared for the fist h e in hmans, despite the fact that &is is often said to be the case, One could say that the evolurion of humans was the drawing mgeher of threads represenring each one of these characterislties &at appeared many fimes over in different forms in different species, If there is a disconrinuiry bemeen Home sapiens and orher living species, it does not lie in. the exclusive possession of stny one of these waits, O&er anhafs use tools but we use mare a-f ~ e n nand more complex ones. Other anhals have complex co systems that share aspects of human language. They may be less sophislicated than h w a n languagc;3, alhougfi they are probably far more sophisticated than we presen* understand. The kind of consciousness that Homo sapiens
'PvllNUS OF THEIR 6 m
has may be special, but we are not l&e2y to he alone as the ody species that is aware of itself. Symbolic language might have extended the power af our minds and it must have enz;iched consciousness but, in my opinion, it diid rzat mark the first appearance of consciousness, There is a conrinuiq of human speech with. the brain structures that: are used for vocalisations in animals, LateraGsaLion. is as mical of animal species as of humans, Both stone and wooden tools were being used well before humans evolved and p l a h n g ahead is essen~al to the sumivai of many species* No sin@e feamre on its own makes us special.
We have a long w y to go before consciousness in animals has been fully established as a scientific fact, despite all of the irndica.eions OF its existence that. have been d e s ~ b e din prevxous chapters of this book, In chaper 1, I said that lack of a u ~ t a wdefini~onfor consciousness should not idibit research on the topic, but we should not forget that differem researchers may be Xoo~ngfor d i f f e r e ~fhbgs. A~entioncould be hcussed on research on one pastieular facet of consciousness, but it is difficdt to choose what might be the best facet to look at. fist, There is also a danger iheresrt in, a focussed approach and &at is the risk of that single approach becoming the axiom for all fu&er research. on consciousness, Were that to happen, it would distort or s ~ f l eoher approaches as, for example, has secwred with IQ t e s ~ n gand research on intelligence in hmarzs. Performance an an IQ test (wfich gives a numerical resdt:, called the Znteuigence Quodent) is only one aspect of the much broader coUec.tion of a ~ b u t e s&at were refenred to as inte~gence,but IQ has dogged the field of research on intelligence in h m a n s for decades. Wi& 146s in mind, X &i& that: research on co@~on and consciousness in a als should proceed along its many different direc~onsbut &at it should take more account of several issues h a t 1 ]Ill outfine in this chapter. The present flower;ing of scien~fxcinvestiga~oninto consciousness in atnbals is coloured by our a ~ m d e sto
DS QF THEIR 6W
ere is much at stake in the social realm: human socie~eshave always relied s.lsongly on eiher coeGsGng s or expioi~ngthem. It i gproach to the science of consciousnesse Scien~srs,it is said tr h t o research from an unbiased posi~onand intespret their findings in the same mamer. As Stewn Rose and H i l q Rose made clear some years ago in their book Scknce and Society, scien~stsdo not work in ivory towers shielded from the a ~ t u d e sof s o e i e ~ ,We enter into anhals with a story of ideas about a reached us ~ o u g hour culmre in. the wider sociew and from wi&in scien~fic disciplhes that presc~be certain a ~ m d e sto our research subjecrs. These atfimdes are most evident in. the inrves~gationof consciousness in animals, AMades and; the case far or agahst cansefor;xsness
Scien~stsresearching a al consciousness may hold opposing posidons. Gabfid Horn of Cambridge U~versity,W, who researches memory fornabon in chick, has said that cGcks have memory systems veq shltfar to &ose of hmans. W d ~ n gin 1988 he said that, when an a behaves in such a way as "E satisfy the crite~afor ju the state of corasciousrress in human beings, it seems togicaliy capricious to a w e &at Ihe afimal is nat conscious. He also stated &at he suspected &at the me will come when the view that h m a n s alone are conscious wfi1 be r e g d e d as bekg as igmranfly anhropacenb-ic as the view that: the sun revolves aromd the ea&* This posidon is in coneast to that of psychologist CeGa Heyes, U~versiw ColIetge Londw, W, in her 1993 cl-itique of the merhods that have been used to sntdy deception and a~bu.fiionof mental sutes in animals. of the o p i ~ o nthat, until there is d e f i ~ t eproof als can a ~ b u t emenal states and are not res simpler wws, the null hypoekesis must con~nueto be that a 81s $0 not a ~ b u t e menatal states.
m u s , Heyes will bold the Descarrian posircion that ls are asswed to lack she abifiq to a ~ b u t emental (consciousness) un& they are proven to be able to do otkeKse, hl&ougfi she says that she has no I-ntendan of s~flingzesearch on mentaf sates in animals, she paints our &at it is, and will conhue to be, extremely difficult to prove (beycmd doubt) rhat anhals have consciousness. In s&er words, it is gohg to be hard to eovavirtce her, as it will be many ather scien~sts,that anhais have cansciousness. Compared ~& Horn" poosirion, hers is a closed one, Tr is, most certainly, deskable to adhere ta strict seiendfic adopt an unswewhg rigow when garhering evidence, b pasidon, against consciousness in Is until it: fs proven n ~ g rigour. c Horn3 abemise is a matter of opinion, Heyes and any other sciendsts may meet the same cfite~a of rigorous invesdga~oninespective of whe&er they be@n from an open ar closed posi~onabout the topic. h most circles of scienUfic enquiv, however, the closed posi.trion receives more &dos, much to the d X w i l l explore in chapter 7. Much of the i d o m a ~ o non decepLion and k i n d als comes from anecdotal repofis made by researchers studying w2d in the field, a number of examples of which were chapter 2, Heyes rejects this evidence on the gromds that it is rarely possible to tell whetfier a given obsenration has be She is more pre&sposed to con.troHed out in laboratory eondidons, such as on c b g a m e e s , she has objecdoxrs m some detags af his particular tal methods, fbs I 2, the chimpam ired to h o w the two hwans, one who b o w s which of four cups has been baited wi& a morsel of food and anotEter who does not, The hknower\ignaJs correa hfomation h u t which, cup has been bided to the chimpamee and the "esser"igrza1s cups at random, CKmpamecs were able to learn to Eouaw zhe bower and thus bad a&buted a sate of howledge to that p a ~ c u l a rperson. M&ough this resdt is quite "
convindrtg, Heyes has suggested &at they ~ g h have t merely learnt to respond to subde cues given by eemin. movements or &ecdons sf eye gaze of the testers. In fact, Heyes pointed out that there were differences h the ways in w ~ c hthe bowerband "esserkoved and looked in the tests @ven to the chhpanzees as opposed to heir movement and appearance in tests &at PovineZti also gave to moAeys. This could have explained why PovineEi concluded that the modeys were unable to a ~ b u t menal e slates. whereas &e chhpamees were able to do so, It is impoaant to draw a~entionto &ese possible hfluences an the results and 1 agree with Heyes h a t it is imporfant to approach all scienGfxc research logicauy and with conwaHed ental procedwes. Udomxlately, however, r_igh.cly con~ofiedexge~ments rxsuaHy demand rather sterile and contrived t e s k g envkonmens that may counteract the expression of complex. comi~oxland evidence of consciousness. Ram photomaphs of the tesdng apparams used by Povirrelli and cofieagues, one can see that the chhpanzee is being tested in a ra&er sterfie laboratoq s e ~ n g much , like &e clinical enviroment of a hospital, Many readers will be famjaiar with the diseomected, dazed state af m9nd &at one develops after a period of h e in a hospital ward, It is b o w n that h m a n s pedomm differentty on many tests when they are given in h perfomance such an enviroment compared ~ t their outside in. the "real' world. In fact, etre mind state in a t so different that patiem that have hospital e n ~ r o m e n is been. meatted with a psychoactive clrug (e.g. a major uanquitljser) in hospital may react quite differendy to zche same dmg when they leave hespial, h fact, the differences in the physiological and psychological responses of che same padent in different social sin~adonsis so well known that Pa.tnlcia and Jack Barcbas of Stanferd University, USA, have devdoped a separare field of smdy caUed Sociophamacofow-o invesligate the effects sf the environment on dmg reactions. Thus, al&ough of interest for rhe very het that exper-
imexlts in the laboratory can be conmued in ways that studies of wild animals camot, resdts obtstined from capdve anha1s should not be seen as l h i t s to the species as a whole. A monkey testcd in the laborar~rymay never show &at it can a ~ b u t emental states to otfiers, but that does not mean &at other members of its species in the wild may not be able to do so, Added to &is, ths experiments used to test for evidence of consciousness are often eraemely ccmtrived.. h some of Povinelli" tests the guesser stood with a bucket over his head wMe the cups were baited. How often w d d anything like this occur in the chnrpanzee" real world? Even the procedure of poin~ngto hidden food is udikely to uccur amongst wild cbpanzees, The fact that the chhpanzees tested Eke this dsplayed the ability to amitbute men&X sates is, perhaps, a ~ i b u t eto mental abifibes far h excess of ~ o s being e used in the task! Differences bemeerr species in. the way they react to the same t e s ~ gsimat-;ion. is often ignored, XI: is common for modeys of vat*lious species to be compared with chimpanzees by resring &em all on the same ask. Using such procedures many researchers have concluded that modeys lack the abiliw to amibute m e n ~ Lstates to others whereas chimpanzees can da so, If all species are given the same End of test, these are bound -to be tlzsse that have the abiliv that is being tested and tfrose that are fomd to be wanting. As we have seen with &c; test of self-recogdtion in a &mar, species difkrences in sociabifi~may d u e n c e the results of the test, and s s too might dsferences in a n e n ~ o nto rke past of the body to which &c spat of coloured dye is applied (see chapter 2 ) . The o~ginal conclusion that apes could recognise &emselves in the minor; whereas modeys could not, did not take these factors into account. M too often, the results rhat have been obtained by testing a few c pamees are said to characterise We chimpanzeeyn general, as a species, Chimpameesbre said to be able to attribute m e n ~ lsates and to cantemplate
and solve problems, whereas "onkeys?, it has been chimed, camot do e i ~ e rof these ~ n g s The , v e q few individuals tested cannot represent the e n ~ r especies, but even more astounding is the fact that alhough &ere are hundreds of species of mo&eys they are so often referred to collectively as if they were one species. The dgferent species of mo&eys are adapted for different en~onments, have different social behaviour and different physiology, and must have vexy. different 'kteUigences9or mental states (chapter 3). In order to understand the mental processes als, these %rids of sweepingly inaccurate ctahs need This does not mean that here are no characte~stics that are shared by all, or most, members of a species, or that we will never be able to discover the mental abgides &at are eharacterisfic of zt species. We already h o w many behaviours are wpical of particular species, However, the path to concluding that a p a ~ c d a rbehaviour or pedormance abiLiv is species mica1 must be trodden with caudan, Just because a srnd s o u p of modeys of a single species does not, for emmple, eAibit the a b i l i ~to amibute a state of mind or bowledge to another in one par~cular tesring situation, it does not mean that alt snodeys in all sima~onswould behave laewise. als not only tested We shodd also remember that a but also raised in laboratoq condihons have ah) been 'hinstimdonalised" and we h o w from h m a n s that this elristence tends to suppress at least sorne aspecrs of complex cognition. When the problem-soking or language abilifies of noAuman apes are compared with those of humans, no menrian is ever made of the fact that in the rnaj0ll.I~of cases the na&uman. apes have been living in relatJlveEy impoverished Laboratory or zoo enviroments, whereas the humans wi& whom they are compared have suffered no such deprivations. Qf course, one cotrld wasider that the special language training that the apes received actually emiched their experience but, if it did so, it was in a particutar fmmework, not in a general sense*
The chimpanzees that Beauix and Men Gardner (chapter 1) aught to use sign language were raised in an envkoment h a t was shilar to that of h m a n children and thus not impoverished, although the chimpanzees' situation was very different from being raised in the Mild. Some scienrists, however, have criticised rfie Gardners5 oorjginal research on the grolmds &at the rearing conditions were not contrroUed rigorously, Here is a double bind, On the one hand, the rearing and testing condirions must be con~olledcompletely or the compIex co&ni~veahiliries that animds display w3l not be believed. On the other band, if the rearing and tesfing condircions are conaolled completely, the envjironment becomes so sterile that a it will be less able, or willing, to display complex c o g ~ ~ v e abilities, fanwage abififies and cansciousness.
Irraddmdty and prablems for teswg Throughout &is book I have spoken sornehrnes of the charac~ris.t_icsof species and somedmes of the characteris~csof individuals, At b e s X have been refeferring to on to aH, or at least those characterisrics that are eo most, members of a species. At other ~ m e sI have been concerned to refer to fhe special characterist;ics of an individual and &us to recowse that, even w i ~ i none species, individuals may differ. This is particularly evident when, one looks at the individual as a whole, takng into account a large number of its characteristics, Thus, one can become aware of the individual as a separate self. When an hdividual, develops, it does so witkin. a framework of exper;lences in a particdar, aifiough changing, enviromental context. Wi.thin limits, it will be only in that environment that its sense of self might be fully expressed, If the sex is not a self in isolation but one expressed wi.tf3in st pahcular social and physical context3 that self may not be expressed in an alien envirament, Thus, if we pluck an a ~ m from d the wild and bring it into the laboratory in order to rest whe&er it has awareness, we may be
defea.ting our p q o s e , The wild animal brought into the laborator;t7 has to adapt to the presence of humans, It also has to adapt to the loss of s&er members of its own species. Such an individual would fmd its nzenrroq store to be of only I ~ t e use d in directing its behaviour in the new enviroment. It wodd have lost a smcmre on which it could hang its sense aE self* X hese are massive changes, which must dier its sense of self and dmost all of its csgni6ve panems al&oup;h3in h e , adaptacian, and new leamhg would QCCW and a new sense of self may develop in the new context. Vet, often, wild-caught animals are tested along wit31 a c a p ~ v i qwi& no excepdons made and n o ~ n of g rhelr past hiistary aken into account. Bath caprive-raised and wildcaught eEmpamees have been tested for self-recog~honin tests using the mirror and red dye, o u ~ n e dh chapter 2. The researchers have always stated h i s fact but it has not been considered in even the more comprehensive intergretaeons of rhe results. Recognfdon of individual vaiaeon. raises ano&er problem so frequendy encountered in &is area of research. As I said previausly, satemenis are often. made about an e n ~ e species on the basis of resdts that have been collected from testing only a few individuals, Even worse, sratemexlts are often. made about all anhals on the basis of results eolIected from only a few als and a few species- It is often said &at animals cannot do sorne&ing that h m a n s can do. H m a n s are members of one species; the coUecaive term "animals' is used for the thousan& of o&er a Those fhousands of species are not a unit that can sensaly be compared with hmans. Moreover, most a als differ one from ano&er as much as do humans, We pretend that they are aU ame. We also make compa~sonsbemeen species of a the basis of r e s d ~from very few representa~vesof each species, T o give another example, a rather small number of capuchin monkeys have been tested in captik.iry on. a a s k to be solved by using a tool (see chapter 3), the results P l
are compared with those for the small number of chimpanzees that have been tested on a similar but not identical task, and the eondusion is reached that capuchins solve the problem by mindlessly nying every solution whereas chimpanzees contemplate it and use thought to reach a solution. Thus, in one s w e p of the scientist's pm, all capuchins are condemned to a posirion b e b d the barrier of consciousness, This amroach is not just unreasonable, it: is unscien~fic.ScienGsts should take into account all of the factors &at may influence heir resdts. However, the problems created by not do;ing so are c of a ~ m a cl o g ~ ~ oand n awareness. Perhaps this is about to change, as &ere are some scienrists who have swessed the hpoaaxlce of ixl&vidual differences. The p~matoloastSarah Bsysen of Ohio State Universi~,USA, has said at the best description of the h p a m e e feamres md behaviam regresenlt-ed anzee popda~onsh the wild and in numerous captivll; envkoments is remarbble variabitity. I would say &at the same is true of mast oher species. We alf h o w this from the pets that live in cllose contact v v i ~us. No two dogs are the same, even when they are from the same litter, and the same can be said af cats, panots and so on, I_t is the intimacy of bowledge of the pet owner &at aUows dlsdncdoxls b e ~ e e nin&.rriduals to be made. But anhtlls do nor change into being more u ~ f o m when they enter laboratories and become part of exper;imen%. They may efiibir behaviours that they have in common, but they remah ixzdiv;iduds, ScienGsts often forget this.
Leamhg &am ea
u~ca~ax M z& ohm species
1 have reasoned &rau&out this book &at lanpage (defined uIlica~onused by hmans; see chapter 1) is not an essendd c~terionfor crzmsciousness, alrhough ng whe&er ana.flller indiit cenaay f a c z ~ t e sde vidual is consckus. By means of language, it is possible to
ate what one is ~ & n g about. Lanpage is not essenriai to being conscious but it is a medium ehrough ~ n can d be expressed to a n o ~ e rin&vidual. c a ~ o nsystems of other a ds but, so far, we have been unable to understand these systems well enough to see whe&crr this is so. Instead, we have wught some a ~ m a I s to use our lanpage, y chhpanzee (or bambo) at the Yerkes te Research Center in Adan&, USA1 has Sue Savage-Rumbaugh to communicate by poinhg at symbols on a board. He points at the symbols u ~ c a t ewith h m a m but he can understand spoken and not in a vial way of merely responding to s; rather, it appears that he understands the syntax of the Ianpage, For example, if he is given the following hsmerion in pidgin English h o u g h ear phones G o get will respond by gohg to get the orange testing room-he p i a and decisively when. orange, but he responds the syxrraceicany comect e d G o and get the orange from the t e s ~ n groom' i s f woufd suggest hiat other species tohat live in close contact wi& hmans, such as our pet dogs, cats and birds, may understand aspects of language, provided &at we have unicated with &em in sensible ways that have meming, frene Pepperberg trained the panat- Hex by ma%ng sure &at he overheard mea~ngfuj,s h g l e verbd hteractions betvveen humans, For example, in front of Aaex one person ~ g h ask t wheeher the other has a key and the latter would say yes and hdd up the key. Mex was not exposed to rfie meaningless Tretey boy" '"Pally warn a drink?"hbrases &at we tend to say to birds. '"Thesephgses can be by parras, and a n m b e r of o&er species of birds, but it is urrfaely that they nderstood by the birds because hey have not, been unicated to &em in m e a h g f d contexts. I predict that many more species would understand aspects of our language if they were exposed to it in the
same meaningful way as Alex and the signing apes have been, and with as much patience. The degree to which this might be possible will have to be determined and it is likely to vary amongst species and amongst individuals. I recognise that any research in this field is fraught with problems of training and interpretation, if it is to meet the suict crite~airequired to prove that an a is producing or understanding tanpage. Research a n@age in a ~ m a l s is of interest in its own fight buty f,espe can test a ~ m a f sthat have learxll; to s i p or to c with us in other ways to see how their So far tbe focus of research with the been taught to communicate using English has been to find out whe&er or not they are acmally ushg language, as we define h, It is not relevant to enter into the debate about heir language abiliries here. I would simp$ like to point out that &ere wig be much more that we can learn from the signing apes, once the controversy about their f a n w a s abilities is set aside and the researchers can get on with a s b g &ferent quesdons, This is not to deny that &ere has been some a~enrionpaid to understanding the minds of the siming apes. m a t do the s i g ~ n gapes tell us about heir minds, quite apafl from the issue of wherber they use tanpage or not? 'l3ey signal desires, lkes and dislkes and also memories of how they felt in the past. The lowland g o d a y caUed Koko, who has been taught to use sign lanpage by Eugene Lhderx. and Francine Pa~erson,at Stadord Universiry, USA, hats a worKng vocabutary of over S00 signs, She shrrgs &ese signs tog nto statements of about unicates about hings in tfirree to six s i p s and she the present and past. Koko had a cornparrion ~ a e n&at died and the loss made her v e q sad. Later, when. asked about it, she would express her sa&ess about the loss. m e n she saw a photogaph, of the Iri~enshe again, expressed her sorrow. She was able to and, eref fore, u ~ e a t eabout th ~& about an not pad: of her diate sirnation,
DS OF' THER OWN
This is one of the criteria for consciousness, men~onedin chapter 1, The s i g ~ n gages also nicate about the fumlre in terns of desires to go or to be given things. Again, hey display &ought$ &at are not part of &eir immediate simar-ion. Perhaps the behavjoural psychologis codd find simple s~mdus-response explana~onsfor these urricatrion, but in my o p ~ o the n siHng ages and speaking panots open up the possibiliilf~rof more exploration of tfieizl nninds.
A s h g an ape about i t s Only from the anhals that have learnt to co with us by ols can we expect to fmd out t. fn the book Kanzk T'ke Ape at the Bm'nk qf Mind Sue SavageRumbaugh describes an occasion in which she was riding h a car with Kami" sister Panbaksha, Noiticing that Panbanisha ]looked as if she were lost in &aught, SavageRumbaugh ventured to ask her what she was & a n g about. The reply came afier a few seconds of reaecdon and it was Kanzi" Savage-Rumbaugh was surprised because Panba~sha rarely used the name Kami. Next SavageR w b a u b replied "h, you are & i ~ n about g Kanzi, are you?" and Panbanisha vocalised excitedy in ageement. Of course, ~s does not prove &at PanbaPliska was, in fact, ~ ~ aboutn Kami. g Sometimes when we are asked what we are t.hi&ng about: we respond with the first ~ n g &at comes into our ~ x t d s The . same problem of refiabili~ of idorma.eion about spontaneous and private ehoughts exasts for anhals and h m a n s alike. I suspect that this is the reason why Swap-Rumbaugk has not ofren asked .this quesbon of the apes wit21 whom she co also says that, when occasionally she has asked &em what they are &i&ng, they usually ignore the queslion. However, it w d d be interesriag to build up a larger repeaoire of the answers to the quesrim 'Wh;lt are you h i f i n g about"".
One could compare the responses given to this question with those given to the quesrion 'What are you dreaming about?>sked when the ape is awakened during rapid-cyemovement sleep, the phase of sleep in which dreaming sccurs. If humans are awakened and asked what they are dreaming about, they can usually give an answer provided that they were in the rapid-eye-movement phase of sleep at the rime, The w a b g makes the substance af the &earn become conscious. To my howledge, no one has anempred to ask the sign-language-trained apes about their dreams, but it should be possible. What E arn suggesting is that these responses shodd be compared with fespomes given when the ape is ~ & n g and awake. If the two Sets of answers are different for the most part, we may have an indica~onflza"Eey report genuine thi&ng because dreams and conscious thought>in humans at least, are rarely -the same. Of cowse, if Panbanisha is particularly focussed on. Kami, she might in the day and also dream about him at: night. In t h i s case, s ~ l a sees r of answers would not mean that apes do not have imer thoughts. However; a vahety of answers and a difference be~eexl,the sets of answers d u ~ n gthe day versus the ni&t would suggest &at h e r tE-rought and dreams O ~ C U . WJe need to ask hportant quesdons of the apes who have learned to communicate with us, and of parrots like Mex also. I agree with tke folowing statement of SavageRmbaugh: To f u d e r a w understanding of h m a l intelligence we must learn to ask beaer quesrions-ques~ons that focus on unuisural events, rather than mundane and r e a a y csnwollabk ones. IE we were to start wi& the assumption &at a ~ m a l sare conscious and capable of &ought, reason, and complex unication, we wodd f i d it dgficdt to came up with evidence that would &sprsve &is view. Instead, we start wi& the premise that they are incapable of such aecomplisbments
and find it difgcdt to disprove this view, (Savage-Rumbaul;gh and L e ~ n ,f 994, pp. 263-2641
So far l: have coneen~ated on measu~ngbehaviour to understand the mind, and I have chosen to do this because the mind is expressed ody in behaviour, whether that behaviour "o Ifanwage or s o m e ~ i n gelse, Thou@ts requke efecwicd acGvi@ in the brain. and changes in the molecules inside the brain but tlhese e l e c ~ c a and l chedcat events are mt the f i n d itsdE They are cowelates of the expression of mind, but they do not. embody the d a d in its endrev, al*thortgh many scienltIsts researching these processes seem to believe &at they do. Xt has recendy became popular to use newobiolageal approaches in the sntdy of consciousness (i.e. to investigate physical and chemical aspects af newe cell funcdo&g in the brain) and, as so often happens, the scienhsts a h g this approach forget that they. are fookng ody at cornelates of consciousness. Before; long they bedn to believe that the pahcular wave forms or chemical events that they are measurhg are consciousness, and &at way af reducing coxlseiolxsness takes us away from the b e h a ~ o u rof the whole a ~ m a in l the real world. The approach is called red-rtctionism. It is an appmach ihat mns the risk of f o r g e b g &at consciousness elrists at- higher levels of orga&sadon and can only be expressed by the behaving, whole admai, I was somewhat dismayed to fmd &at a coderence e n ~ d e d Toward a Science of Consciousness3Etdd in Tucson, USA, in 1996 was a h o s t en~relydevoted to nerve cell comec~oxls,molecular events, quanmm mechanics of nerve cell funcfion, computer modelling and some phifosophy of the mind. Human perception was included, and some research that had used anhals to record various chentical and physical aspecrs of brain function was repoaed. The latter had tested monkeys squatting in front of video m o ~ t o r sto measwe eye movements. There was
no paper that vaguely approached the theme of consciouse I $a not wish to d e ~ a c tfrom the challenging papers presented by eminent scientists in their particular fields, I do wish to express my surplise at the narrow focus of a coderence a h e d "award a science of consciousness" It is as if it is acceptable to use a study the nuts and bolts of cognitive processes, whereas it is mfashionable, in These r e a h s at least, to consider the expression of thi I am not about to c~%icise the &recZion of any research that deals with rhe baffling question of consciousness hut I do befieve that ehe study of consciousness should be broad enougb and be approached open-nnind expand a w visions, ra&a &an worKng carrfmes of the eonsmcts already in place here is much to be gained from exckange of ideas and by considering the conscio s tage&er. I wodd go a step be gained by compa into account their differences and nate the problems. Foeussing on the rneneal processes of prhates and ignsfing those of birds has led many scienests to &storted views of the brah s m c m e s that might be involved in awareness and consciousness (chaper 4) and has provided a. narrow view of evolu%ion. Much can be achieved by compa~ngspecies even tkough we might do so merely to shed light on our own species. I would hope &at there w 3 be increased effofis to understand orher species as well as our own,
Topics related to consciousness &at have been covered in this book indude clever or ktelligent d i s c r ~ n a t i o nand categorisafion of o b j e c ~and evens; co&~ve integarion of i d o m a ~ o r rand where it fight occw in different parts of the brahi ways of responding that might reveal hternal menwE states such as self-awareness and awareness of the
MNDS OF THEIR O W
mhd state of o&ers, and co c a ~ o nabout even& of the past and of the conceived fume. The mathem~cian and philosopher David Chahers believes that &ese are the 'easy>rt>blerns of consciousness because they can be tacMed by standard m e ~ a d sof sdence, Perhaps that is m e if one confines the discussion. ta consciausxless in humans but, as we have seen, &ese became 'hard"rob1ems when we apply &em to akmals. The merf.lsbs that we need to apply rare neither sandard nor easy. Chdxners says &at one of the hard problems of consciousness is the subjec~veexpeeence of being conscious. We experience being able to se r example, rehess has a q u a i i ~&at we YeelLwe experience ernodons as an hternal feeling; and we experience sm trah of thought. Philosophers call these qu&tadve feelings "ualia" As Daflriel Dennea points out in his book Csnscious;~zessExcplaked, the conscious mind not only messes colours, smeUs and s s on, but &so appreciates them. The qua5a must arise from the worfings of: the brain, the d e h c a l signals and the molecular changes and so on, but we do not h o w how, The problem with qualia is h a t they are completely private experiences and we do not h o w haw expee7-ielaceo f cl-zi&ng comes about in humans, let alone in anhals. Nor do we h o w how we might go about investlga~ngthe: acmtzl conscious experience. In chapter 2, 1 asked w h e ~ e rrhe young chick wha is ma&ng dislress calls actuaay has the experxence of feeli~g disrxessed. We do not h o w of a way to access that feeling itself> if it elrisrs, but we ~ g h assume t &at it exists in same fom or anorher if we can demonstjrate that the chick shows o&er characteristics of awareness. n o s e who seek .ts understand the subjedve exge~ence af consciousness will not be sarjisfxed with the kind of research. being carried out: on awareness or consciousness in axrrrnals, but those who seek ta learn more about animals wiU be excited by answers to the questions &at Chahers calls 'easy'.
THINKING, FEELING AND ANIMALRIGHTS
We pawonlse &ern for heir incompleteness, for their tragic fate of having t a k n form so far below ourselves, h d thcreh we err, and gresi* err. For the animal sln8 not be measured by man, In a world older and more complae &an ours they move f ~ s h e c tand complete, @fted with extensions of the senses we have lost or never a~ained,Eving by voices we shag never hear, 'They are not b r e ~ e n ;they are not underlings; h e y are other nations, eau&t with oursekes in the net of life and h e , fellow prisoners of rfie splendour and @avail of tbe earth. (Bestan, 19'7 1, pp. 19-20)
Thoughout this book 1 have drawn a ~ e n ~ to s nthe ways in wEch our a ~ m d e sta animals have shaped our views e s awareness. and expectarions af their c o a ~ s ea b ~ ~ and 'The scien~ficsmdy of a~nnalsis itself far from free of these a ~ m d e s .In this final chapter, it is approp~ateto deal w i the ~ ways in which att_i~des to the mental a b a ~ e s of a~xxzalsinfluence how we treat them and how we v;iew &em in the aamal enviroment, We have seen that species adapt to their part_icular environments. Most are, indeed, uniquely specialised to suit their own nan~tralenvironme~s.But are mast of &em really so different from us? htelligence and consciousness may have evolved many times over but -the outcome might be furic~onauymuch the same. Mso, vviU we ever hear their voices? Beston (quoted
above) speaks as a rzamralist in awe of the a namral enviroment that surounded his c o ~ great beach of Cape Cod In a s s a c h u s e n h e n t that many share and I must l[ have been moved to thi& l k e ~ s e . als can be no more &an a source of inspira~anto seek more bawledge about them. As a seienGst who studies rhe behaviour of a n b d s , I do believe g closer to h e a ~ n gthe voices of o ~ e r species and that &ek CO nicaeion may not be beyond access by us. T o reach it we will need a different perspecGve and a desire to understand, in. the true sense of the word, nor; merely to exploit them for the p q o s e s of hmans, I am afraid that most funded research is -for the latter category and rela~velylittle support is given, to understanding those other species that are "aught with ourselves in the net of He and time'. The issue is ~o-pronged,Urrless we study them now, many aimaIs W% be no longer w i h us %n the net, of life and b e " as &ey be exket. To recsgise the need to smdy heir behaviour, not merely for exploitabon, vviU mean to change attimdes, to dismanfle the divide that we have consmc-r;ed beweexrt them and us.
als m i n & d d d s and idend~eslast h chapter 6, the need to take individual differences bemeen Is into account in research was discussed. Of coume, uld be inconece to say that individual differences apply als from uniceUdar o r g a ~ s m s equany to all spec exady the same, but individbehaviour must have become Physical and mental uniqueness of individuals nrigh"ce a precursor to self-awareness because the self must be distinguishable from others. Social behaviour also relies on individuals being different. Each individual m s t be recognised by its appearance and behaviour.
G, kTELNc2r AND AN1
If animds were merely machines, all members of the same species ~ g h be t al&e. Few of us consider Lhis to be so for species with which we are f a ~ l i a ras pets or as w o r b g animals. Never&eless, hese qel-iences with animals on an h d i ~ d u a llevel seem to do little to change our a ~ m d e sto a ~ m a l sin a gerreral sense, We still tend to see es species that sue less f a ~ l i a rto us as unimq e n ~ ~ and to ignore individual differences, instead c o n c e n ~ a ~ non g the characterisGcs shared by aU members of the species. We tend to treat species wit31 which we are less f a d i a r as invariant units, We give our pets names but thi& of wild species coUlec~vely'as the hngaroos" 'the horses" and so on. The same is m e in sci research on a&mals involves tes werage (mean) scores are calcul ar even the species. As Lynda Birke of UK, has pointed out, scienGsts often worhng on standardised poups of an. or rabbits) merely because they have not bolhered to get to b o w the individuals well enough. Rats are as irrdividuauy different from each other as are dogs and cats. Our a ~ m d e s are often, a maner of conve~ence for research, This als as species has been useful, approach of smdy-ing a up 20 a point3 in discipGnes such as erhology and ecology, b-ut even in these fields some researchers are starzing to take illldividual &fferenees into account, As X have discussed in previous chapters, taking into accomt in&vidual &fferences is exeemely t3tpoaant when one is smdying camplex behaviour, in p a ~ c u l a rbehaviours &at refiect consciousness. We need to live in close contact and co adon with animals if we are gokg ta be able to their subfle behaviours and if we are going to undersand Lhem in any way, eties of the past &at lived in close contact with either as hunters or as famers on smaU farms animals, were acutely aware of the hdividualiry af animals- This began to change vvlitfi vent of larger herds and flocks. By mediaeval h e s a were seen as
MNDS OF THEIR O m
m e s or symbols and they could bear in public . perceived eharacterisdcs of ceremonies of p ~ s h m e n t The each type al were associated w i the ~ amr re of the c r h e , In for example, dogs were hung an ei*er side of a person who had commi~eda c infamy. als tkernselves were .tried an i d i c k d h a m on humans, In humans lived in chse ass~eiadon some senses, seen as equivalent to were camidered to be outsiders. They were seen to refiect h w a n i v but to be outside it in a way that set a boundary beween animals and hmans, &hough individual an,irnals could be punished for human-type e es by public exe~wbonsthe same as those used far humans, they were not seen as in&viduals but as species-specific Types, Xenard the fox', for example, epitomised a host of unacceptable e those w o r ~ n gon smaller fams may have, over intained close rela6sxlships w i indivihal ~ arzimals, as human socieq has increased in size and far has become an en~epreneurialpractice with ever-increasing sizes of Rocks and herds, it has become impossible for famers to b o w akmsrls as individuals, In the i n d u s ~ a l faming of today the idenrities of individual animals are esmpleteIy Xost. MmaXs in intensive farms arc seen as bodies, ta be fa~enedor to lay eggs. mowledge of their behaviour is of concern only to prevent them from a i c r i n g injury an each other or themsehes, ta stop fearher pecking, tail and ear bihg, and so on. Their higher comitive abiliries are ignofed and definirely unwanted. I ended my previous book3 The P)(eit.li&Iopmentof Brain and Behavkur in the Chichn, with che gatemem chat the domesric chichn is the avian species most exploited and least respected, Despite Pheir dornesdea~on,chickens have retairred complex cog~ r i v eabiliries. They are not the same as feral or wild chickens, but the view af domes~ecGckens as smpid has more to do with how we think of chickens than with the ab2i6es of the chickens rrtremselves, '"Fhe examples of
coxxrmunicafiion behaviour and decision nna~ngin domestic cKcks that we discussed in chapters 2 and 3 show that they are anMing but smpid. According tra Peter Singer, a philosopher at Marrash University., hsrcralia, and aufior of Animal Lib;re-ration, the main. issue underlyhg the consmction of a &f b e ~ e e n a ~ m a l sand humans is to jiushfy the eaGng of anhals. hdus&al farming relies on this gulf bemeen "em' and "us" So too does the new move into producing 'designer animals" ones gene~caUy exrgkeered to grow faster or produce a certain sort of meat or any oel-rer product that the market demands. Designer anbals will sdlf. have minds, maybe even consciousness, but they wiB not be llreaced as such,
Do domesdc admds have lesser An u l b a t e aim of breeding programs for domesbe animals als that have minds so blunted that they will passiveIy accept overcrowded housing caazdilrions and having vimally noOhing to do but eat-and then to eat standard and bodng food delivered automaGcally, There is na evidence that domesfic chickens, or ather domcslric breeds, have been so cog~tivelyblunted &at they need or want no more behavioural sdmula~on.&an they receive in baaemy farms. In fact, if domesdc breeds are rek~oduced to more narural conditions and bred &ere, they adapt rapidly to the beaer condi~ons.It is possible to change some aspects of behaviour by selec~vebreeding but only wihin lifits. Domes~ebreeds may be more docile, or less fearful and mre accepr_ing of the presence of humans, but ~ c s ebehaviours reflect temperament and mo~va.fion,not cogniGve abaities. In earlier chapters, X have poinred out the importance of environment. on the development of brain and behaviour. a1 raised in e a p d v i ~of any farm, whe.cher it be in intensive farming, a laboratory or a zoo, can adapt ly to feral or wild condidons, In most eases, a
prolonged g e ~ o dof rehabilita~on. t r a i ~ gis required and in some cases a d a p ~ d o nto the new condirions may be hpossi,Eale, This does not mean that the breed itself has shifted away from a need for more natural or more sGmdaring condi~ons.Domestic hens taken from battery cages may take some time to adapt to more freedom, but if their chicks are raised in more nattrraf coxz&~oxlsrhey show swrising sidarif;y to wild cKcfxens, T h e e o g ~ ~ v e capaciry of rhe breed and its ability to p e ~ o r mcomplex behaGow appears to remah i_nt;ltct, despite generadons of breedhg u d e r rhe conwol af humans.
Whellzer we assume that anhals do or do not have con~eiousae~s how we &eat them, Hence, cog~ r ; i o nand co in animals is unquestlionably an issue of great hpomaxce to the welfare of anhals, not but also in other areas in wfi_ichhumns h p o a a n t to the eneire h i m a l Welfare to accept h a t at movement that scien~srsare begi feast some species of animals (most p i d e h e s apply only to verfebrae ancimals) can experience pain after the individud has reached a parlJcdar stage of development, ore, many scientises now recognise that the pain be somade or psychologeal and that it may be specific to an individual, based on that individual's past experience and particular needs. Past experience with parcicdar people can also embered and dter the a m o u ~ of s ~ e s ssuffered by a in subsequent experiments or procedures. The presence of a preferred human relieves seem, whereas one that is disliiEred exacerbates it. Memories of past events and associations become part of the present sirnation and compound the a ~ m a l "feelings. 2 3 e sensation of pain is not absolute but subjective and dependent on many different facton. The sensa.r_ion:of pain is not direcdy related to aware-
ness of self or of others, but awareness and consciousness might alter the kind of pain that is suffered and the subjective experience of pain. N & ~ u g hit is unquescimablc that anhals with cansciousazess will expeience pain, failure ta find evidence of consciousness in a species should not be used as a reason to conclude that the species does not feel pain. It rnust be remernbezed haw diflFicult it is to design everimems that, in any way, measure consciuusness. Added to this, &ere are the l&ely afferenees in consciousness benveen species, as well as benveen individuals. Since, as I. have reasoned in this book, consciousness in its various mazliifesta~onsmay have evolved many h e s over, and t!ms species may have dzferent inteftigences and different forms of consciousness, it follows &at &e way in which animals expe~encepain may also v a q from one species m the next. A.though we have not yet found a way of estabfishing whe&er &is is a fact, &is way of viewing +he experience of pain by animals provides a useh1 basis for animal welfare, Marian DawEns af Oxford University, W, has said that decisions about w h e ~ e ran anhail can feel p a k do not have to be based on absolutes, One does not have to choose bemeen the a ~ m a lbeing, on the one hand, an automaton witI"tout consciausness and, on the o&er hand, having aU of the elements of consciousness (as in humans). That is, the choice is not bemeen an a completely wi&ou-f an abitj_ry to feel pain and an that has the total sensa~onof pain, as we h o w i problem wi& this line of reasoning is &at it places anha1 species on a hierarchic& scale with h m a n s at the top. Some animals are seen as having more elements of consciousness than have other a ~ m a l s ,but rarher than being a matter of more versus less it may be one of different kinds of consciousness in differem animals. Thus the seasarion of pain may be art issue not of more versus less aIs, Same suppart pain but of different gain in diffmene a for this conceptrualisisa.e,ion comes .Ejrom the fact that h m a n s experience different b b s of pain. For example, we can
expe~exlcedull continuous palin vemus rapid s h a ~pah, and &ese sensaPions are detected by different receptors and newe endings in he:skin and ~ansmittedto the brain via dzferent neural pa~ways.There are many orher knds of pain, sorne of which mi9;~be different degees sf the same End of pain and o&ers &at are different sensations that we s a l refer to as pain. The one that ~ g h concern t us mast here is psychological pain. Far exmple, we refer to the pain of Isss, felt after a close friend dies. Koko, the gorilla who co 'cates uskg h e r i e a n Sign Lanwage, feeling of loss after her kitten died expressed the (chapter 6). Dogs have been h o w n to pine away and die after the dearh of a h m a n c a m p a ~ o n ,There are many such examples, al&ough the pain of loss has not been smdied sciendficdy . We also experaence pain or suffering by seeing o&ers suffer because we emparltise with tf.lem. If animals can a h b m e mental states to ofhers, as indeed we have saong indicii~axls that at least sorne species can. (discussed in chapter 21, then we have to consider &at an a suffer by seeing the suffering of ohers. The gofla Koko has demsnsmted clearly h a t she can assess the sufferkg of ohers and feel sadness on their behalf, Koko has signed %Sad?-hen one of her carers expressed sadness* Vhen Koko m s shown a photograph of anoher gorilla; s ~ g g G n gtcr, get m a y from being bached, she signed 'Me cry these" which suggests recognition of the piemre and self-related idea~ficarion.rather than emparhy. Empa&y was &min other si~ations:when her cornpanion gorilla, lWchael, was eving because he warned to be let out of his roam, Koko signed Feel s o w out9. There might be many anirnals & i f i n g this in laboratory and faming enviromenm as they watch or hear other als bein: experimented on or being Wed. None of the present widelines for animal welfare take this into accamt. There may be many levels of e m n ~ o nand cognition &at respond to seeing anoaher member of one" sspecies
suffer. Species and individuals will vary on how this affects but we have no reason to believe that they are not affected, k g i s l a ~ o nfor animal welfare will, in my opinion, have to include guidelines for prevendng suffering by empa&y with the suffering of ohers. Ar the present b e legislation for appropriate caging condi~onsfor arzimals used in research and agricdmre takes urn req~rementsfor the species. It into account the mi is a h e d to enswc &at provision is made fur the spedes to carw out its basic behaviours, Some say that a species must be able to express its Ynskcts" imate behaviours. The debate has centred around, for example, whether b a ~ e r yhens should be given rrrate~alin which they c m dust-babe or whether cattle in feedlots shadd be provided with shelter. These are such basic aspects of behavioural and physiolo@cal requhements that it can only be said that the debate is about pro~ding minimally beaer housing; condirions at the least E"mancia1 east, Once one begins to consider that the domes6c animals in quesrian have complex comi.trion and &at they may require more slimulatian. an they receive in intensive Earning condirions and in most laboratov housing, the debate about welfare moves on to an entirely new level, Anhals in confined caging or housed in csndi~onsthat provide them with little slimulabon show stereotyped behaviours, meaning that they repeat 'che same behaviour over and over again, For example, pigs housed in isolafion in crates or in overcrowded conditions with little to do will chew the bars or lick them in stereo~pedways, b x n a l s in zoos frequenoy do mewise or they pace up and down along the waUs of the cage. Humans in instituxions, such as menal hospitals or gaols, also develop stereotryped behaviours. Tt seems &at the stereop~piesprovide sorne sort of physical szlimulation, and some menpal sbulation, that: calms the stsessed T h e condirisns that are s ~ e s s f dvary with the: species and the past exper5ence of in&viduals, but being isolated is srressfd to some and being overcrowded is s~essfulto
ems
MINDS OF THEIR O W
oaers, Not being able to move around is clearly stressfd als. But what about s ~ e s scaused by insufficient mental srimulation? We wodd not hesitate to accept that as a source of s@ess in, bimaxls (indeed, &at is the basis of h p r i s s m e n t and p u ~ s h e n t ) but , few consider &at it s. It is now me is the same fix a srimda-elon into adeGnes for a already considered un.acceptaMe to keep sheep in hetabolism cagesycages in which they stand on wire floors and that are so small that the sheep camot turn around) for very long periods but this decision is based purely on their physical need to have exercise. The lack of mental stimuladon that the sheep receives when confined in the cage may be just as s@essful,Lack of s h u l a ~ a nis a recog~sed problem for pets, such as birds locked in cages with few &ings to play with or ears and dogs locked in. the house whae the owner goes out, There are pet &erapy programs that seek to entertain. anhals in. t-hese sima~ons,There are ewn video f i h s available for cats and dogs to watch (bouncing balls and the like), but I b o w of no evidence that these aemaHy provide the required stimulation. We b o w that species from fish to birds and primates will a ~ e n d to video hages but we do not h o w what hey ~ g h t choose t-o watch for any pefiod of h e ! : The &eat Ape Project:
als are various and, as we A ~ m d e sto the welfare of a have seen, they are changing3 and will continue to do so, " spanse to the new idarmadon on hi&er eognircion in als. Some people are in suppsn of p i d e h e s and legis1a.f.ion specifically to protect afimals. Others feel &at animds have rights that must be protected. h 1993 the book The Great Ape Project edited by Paola Cavaliei and Peter Singer was published, It advocated that all of the peat apes, including humans, shadd be put wihin one f a d y , instead of the present catego~sarcion&at separrtres h m a m from the orher @eat apes. l k i s positiun
is based in part on our genetic simaariy to the other apes (our genes & f i r by up to ody 2 per cent: see chapvr 5 ) and in part on the new discoveries of the intelligence o f chimpamees, orang-utans and godas. In fact, some of the signing apes have been tested on intelligence tests designed for hmans. For example, Lyn Miles at the U~versiwof Temessee, USA, has tested Ckantek, a s i g ~ n gorang-utan, an the s~netardBayfey Scale for Infant Development, wEch is used to assess mental developmexlz: of h m a n children.. The tests include buiXding towers af cubes, folding paper into certain shapes and poin~ngto specific picmres. At men@-four msxrhs old, Chantek" score was eq~valeatto that aE a human ch3d of 13.6 mon&s. At f i e and a half years old his score was equivalent to that of a human child of almost m o years old. Other indicators of mentd development, inclu&ng symbolic play, language comprehension. and tool use, put the five-year-old Cbantek at the level of a four-year-old human child. The gorilla Kaka showed much the same relationship to an. intelli On some m e s of ques~onsKsko e ~ e than r n chadren of the same age: namely, in d i s e r i ~ n a ~ obeween n "samehand "different" and in detee~onof R ~ W Sin. a series of incomplete or distorted drawings. On oher types of ques~ons,such as ehose requiring precise coodinarion m fit pieces of puzzles together, she was not: as good as human children. Some intelligence tests have as much to do with movement eanaol of the fingers and bands as to do with problem solving using coMtion, and the conswcrian of an orang-utan's and of a gorilla" hand does not make it easy for &ern to put togerher pieces of puzzle designed far b m a n hands. I find these results hpressive, pasriculiarly when one considers that the human standards with which Chantek and Koko were compared were average values cdculated by assesskg a large number of chilrlren raised in envirsnmen& v e v different from theirs. M&ough Chaatek and G k a were given much a~entionand mining, their worXds were velrlJr different from &ose of the human ch2dren wi&
MINDS 6 F TmIR O W
which they were cornpard. In some ways they received more attenGon and s h d a t i o n than most human cM&en and in. oher ways they received less. h padculah they were not p e m i ~ e dfree movement in the world at large. This could have cumiled at least some aspects of their m e n ~ tdevelopment3 alfiough o ~ e raspects might have been ehanced, The point is that, not bebg h m a n s and nor being raised enrirefry like most humans, or--utans and o&er apes camot be compared urrea~ngfaywith humans by using the same test. X @ant that these comparisons have served to hpress people regarding heir mental cwab%Ges, but only because p~v;iouslywe have believed them to be so inferior to us, Moreover, Chantek and Koko are shgle represena~vesof tfiek species being compared ~& the average human child. Haw vpical are they of their respeerive species? Chantek might be a very intelligem orang-utan, whatever we might mean when we apply this concept to an individual, and Koko d g h t be a very integigent g o a a . Mtema~vely,they might not be especially intelljigent compared with oher members of their species. Qf course, it could be a r ~ e d&at Chantek, Koko and the o&er s i g ~ n gapes were, in fact, raised to some extent as fiddle class h e ~ e a nchildren. and &erefore the intelligence tests used were appropriate for them. In a sense I agree with this, at least in comparison with ather apes, but they were not raised exacdy Iike a human child and they still ehibit bbeaviours and abiE~esthat are wpical of &dr species. The researchers working with Koko recog~sed&is and cited .the followhg emmple to auswate the point: h s w e r s &at seem perfecliy plausible to a gor2la must sornethes be scored as emors on standardized tests, For instance, the am-hdersen Test has two quesGons with a disdnct human bias. One queseion directs the child to T'aoint to the two &ings that are good to e a t . T h e choices are a block, an apple, a shoe, a flower, and an icecream sundae, Koka picked the apple and the flower, &oher quesGon asked the c&ld to point out where it would run to shelter from the
TH
G, mELIMG AND AN1
rain. The choices were a hat, a spoon, a see, and a house, Koko sensibly chose the tree. (Paaerson and Linden, 1981, p. 124)
'The ques~onsare Ass culme dqendent, I have a Bdinese f ~ e n dwho eats ceaain types of Bowers as delicacies and might respond similarly to the same ques.tion. More smdies such as this wiX-2 edighters our search to understand the minds of apes but we must remember that the intelligence tests used have been designed far hmans, not orang-utans or mees or gsrr"llas, Indeed, intefligence tests are prab even wihin human popula~ons. In fact, htegigexlce tests are acmatly designed for ~ d d l e and upper class, Western children, and they do not aansfer as accurate measures sf the intelligence of workng class chilrJren or children of a a c r cultures. It has been possible to design an intelligence test on which warEng class children pedom wi& higher scores than ~ d d l eclass chilctsen. The test asks the children to salve different soas of social problems and to have different background h o w ledge. Judging by this, there should be no dif6cul@ in designing an inteuigence test: on which arang-utam p e ~ o m b e ~ e rthan humans, provided that we h o w enough about the behaviour of orang-utans in. the first place, Hme the reader might be reminded of the pigeons that perfomed better than humans on a task requikg &ern to match shuXi presented at various rotations, a problem based on the Eysenck IQ test (chapter 3 ) . Despite the veuy. serious problems with the standard human intelligence tests, it is of interest to give them to the signing apes, prot.ided that the answers are interpreted creatiwely in order to demans~atehow close the performances scores of human and apes can be. However, I must to an element of concern, When tested on tl-tese ence -rests designed far humans, apes will atways have lower scores than humans of the same age and I suspect at this is used to co our feeling af superio~w.We have designed the tests so that they will do just that.
Of course, the Great Ape Project takes other cognitive ab,ili~esof the great apes into account, when it a h s to shift the boundary that presendy divides us from the orher great apes and thus extend to these animals rhe rights &at are presenlly lim,i@d to hmans. Xn a p r a p r l i c sense, f certaidy suppor~:this move. On the one hand, there is an urgent need to protect the dkndling a m b e r s of great apes that are still suwivhg in the wild from being poached m be eaten or sold as pets. OR the other hand, they should not be ehibired in zoos or used for medical researtlh. Huge n u b e r g of them are presenrly used for these purposes, pahcularly in the U~tedCStates. we extend h m a n fights E 0 people who canmat tak, or have not yet learnt to ta&, and to ans of all levels of IQ performance, and righdy so, Yet, as proponents of the Great Ape Project: pobt out9 it can be said &at the great apes overlap with the range of h an perkrmance, Apes and h m a n s differ in sorne characterisfics and overlap in orhers, The overlaps are justifica~onfor not separafing &ern. from us. The Great Ape Project has raised chese and rnany ather importam issues. However, my suppoa of the Great Ape Project is not given, wirtzorxr some resewafions. By sXftin,g the boundary to allow apes into the s m e group as hmaxls, we are still saying that %some anhafs are more equal &an o&ers< In t h i s book 1 have emphasised the higher cogni~ve abilides of birds. The inte1:lligence of sorne species of bkds is, in many ways, equivalent to &at of sorne species of prhates, even the apes. Yet genetically they are far removed fmm us. m a t can we do about heir righs? The same may, in fumre, be said of rnany other species. h e we to gant rights to only our closest gexle~c:rela~ves?h e we to do so on the basis of inteuigence or awareness, both of which are impossible to assess on, any single c~terion? Whatever amibute we choose, here w21 be the problem of placing a boundary dividing &ose species that we rhik have 3tYrom t%losethat do not.
G, FEELING AND AkJX
T h e debates about the welfare and ights of anhals wiU
con~xlue,reliant on new inflorma;cion about cogrrition and consciousness in animals. A ~ t u d e swill change and .those changes will also be resisted by those who have mast to gain by & i ~ a gof animals as little more than, clocbork macfinery, For many years the smdy of consciousness was seen as an unacceptable topic for those who smdy the s m c m e and hnctisn af the brain (neuroscien.fists) as welt as for those who study the behaviour of animals (e.trhologists). Xt was tainted with the intangble, comidered beyond parrsimofious explanation. Consciousness does, indeed, defy explanabon in the shglest possible terns, Xt demands concepmalisatioxl at higher Zevels of compleA.ty, even involving a touch a f the mysteiaus. That is its chauenge, The e&alo@st P a ~ c kBateson of Gamb~dgeUniversiry, lIK.3 has said that slavish obedience to the m a x h of parskany tends to 'sterilize haginadonband that some of the most i n t e r e s ~ ga t ~ b u t e sof a n h a l behaviour are &us almost cerraidy overlooked. I could not agree more. By i g n a k g the mast hteresfing a ~ b u t e sof the behaviour of we not ody d h i n own expernienees but also the errristence of a
Chapter 1 Boakes, R. (1984) From Dam& to Behauku~sm:Psycko2ogy a~ad he Minds cE;fAnimab.Cambridge Ziniversiq Press, Cambridge. Byme, R.W. (19W) n e Tirzliakirzg Ape: EvoE1;~tiomvOIr:gz"~sOS Inlelligence. Oxford University Press, Oxford, Chalmers, DJ, (1995) The puzzle of consciaus experience. Scientz3c Amenkan, Dec,, 6 2 4 8 . Gheney, D.L. and Seflafi, R.M. (1990) How Monkeys See the World: Inside the Mind of Analher Species. LT~versiry of C~ricagoPress, Chicago. Expressiosz rtf the E m u ~ i min ~ &n and Damin, C. (1965) Animals, First published in 1872. Repubfished b y ti'niversiq of Chicago Press, Chicago. DawEns, M,S, (1993) T%rougiFz Our Eyes Onb? The Search for A n k a l Cslasciousness, W.H. Freeman, Oxford, Gardner, B.T. and Gardner, R.A. (1969) Teaching Ianwage to a clnimpamee, Scieme, 165, 664472. Griffm, D,R, (1982) Animals Minds. Universi~af Chicago Press, Chicago, -(l9841 Agimal T%zizkigg, Haward Universi~Press, Camb~dge. KapXan, G. and Rogers, LJ. (1994) Oraw-wlarzs i~ Borneo. University of New England Press, &midale. McFarfand, D, (1989) Problems of Ani~aalBehavz'our. Langman Scien~ficand Technical, Harlczw, Premack, D. (1986) Gavagag or the E;"~ttdreHistory of the Anhak hnguage Controversy. MIT Press, Camb~dge.
Estau, C.A. (1991) Cog~itive Ethohgy: The Minds of O G ~ F Animals. Lawrence ErXbaum, msdale, N.J. Romanes, C.J. ( 1882) AnimE htelligerace. Kegan Paul, London, Sswage-Rumbw&, S. (1994) &nzi: The Ape a6 the Bmnk of he Hgman Mind John Wiley and Sans, New "Jsrk. New York. Terrace, H.S. (1979) Nim, Nfred A. VVbiiren, A. (ecl,) (1991) Natzlral Tholi'tks of t h M i ~ d :EvolatGn, CleveIspmen~asad Szinulation Ilf Eucary&y Mind Reading. Basil Blackwell, Oxford.
Chapter 2 Boesch, C. (1W91) Teaching among wild chj,mpamees, Animal Bgkvzlozl.1; 4 1, 530--532. -(11993) itspects of transmission of toof-use in wild chhpanzees. In K.R. Gibson and T. Ingold (eds) To@Es,b ~ w g e and Cognition z12 H u m n Evolec~z'on. Cambridge U ~ v e r s i v Press, Cambridge, pp, 171-1 83, Byne, R.W. ( 1995) The Thinking Age: Evolaltiamq Onkins of Intelligence. Oxford Universiv Press, Oxfwd. Gheney, D.L. and Seyfa&, R.M. (1990) Artending to behaviour versus anending t s howledge: exa&ning modeys? g ~ b u d o n of mental states, Animal Behzlzour, 40, 742-"753. -(1990) How Monkeys See the WorU: I~sidethe Mind of Another Specks. Uiversiry of Gficago Press, Chiicago, Epstein, R,, Llanca, R.P. and SEnner, B-F. (2981) "elf-awareness" in the pigeon. Sciemce, 212, 695496. Evans, G.S., Evans, L. and Marler, P. (1993) Qn the meaning of aXam calls: functional reference in an avian vocal system, AnzinaE Beha~iour,46, 23-38. Gallup, G,G. Jr (19"76) Chimpanzees: Self-recag~~on. Science, 16% ,687. Gdup, G,G, Jr, Pode&, DJ., Suara, S.D., hdeman, J.R., k h a t e , J. md Memef>E%'. (1995) F&er refleebans on s&-reco@Gon in phates. Animl Gyger, ?v%, and Marler, P. (1988) Food ca%ng in rhe domestic faw1 (Gallus gall=): The role of external referents and decep~an,A n k a l Behviour, 36, 358-365, Hauser, M. ($996) m e Evolution of Compnun.icatiolz. MIT Press, Cambridge. Hauser, M., eaE&, J., Bono-Mahan, C., Gamer, M. and Qser, j.
DS OF THEIR O
n
(1995) Self-recogn_ition in prhares: Pbylogeny and the of &e Natz'(lml salience of species-~picdf e a ~ r e s Proceedings , Acmdi?m,y of Sciences, 92, 10811-10814. in prhates. Heyes, C,iIJf, (25394) Reflections on selGrecog~~on Asaiwl Behavkur, 47, 909-81 9. Manning, A. and Serpell, If. (1994) Animals a7zd Human Society: Changing Perspectives. Routtedge, London. itlarler, P, and Evans, C. (1W6) Bird calls: just emotional displays or someehing more? Ib& f 38, 2 6 3 3 , Masen, K. and Psarakos, S, ( 1 9 5 ) Using self-view television to distinwish bemeen sel lion and social: behaviour in the boeflenose dolphin ( tm~catw) . Gorzscu7usness and Gogaition, 4, 205-224. Mum, C.A. (1986) Birds &at 'cry wolf'. Nature, 319, 143-145. Parker, ST., MircheB, R.W. and Boccia, M.L. (1994) Seg-amareness in Anhals and Humans: Developmen-tal Perspectives. Cambridge U ~ v e r s Press, i~ Cambridge. PovheHi, DJ. (1989) Fasure to fmd self-reeognirian in Asian etephrtts (EIephm mmascimus) in convast to their use o cues to discover hidden food. J T a ~ molf Cornparathe ogy, 103, 122-131. oysen, S.T. (1990) Inferences Po~neHi,D,J,, Nelson, chbpamees (Pan troglodytes). about wessing and Juumzal ~f Gmparative P~yc~ology, 104, 203-2 10. PovineG, D.J., PaAs, K.A. and Novak, M.A, (2991) Do rhesus monkeys ( M m c a na.ulacta) amibute hawledge and ignorance to other? J L ) u ~ G E of Gompa:~tivemc)"E~b~, 105, 31 8-325. Povinegi, DJ, and Preuss, T.M. (15195) Theory of h a d : evojutionay ~ s t o s y of a cagni~ve specialisarcion. Trends in Neurosciences, 18, 4 18-424, Prernack, D, and W o o h f f ? G. (1978) Does the ehirnpamee have a &eow of ~nd-Elehavioural and Braz'n Scknces, 4, 515-526, Dcrvehpmenr: of Bmin a d Behaviour in Rogers, LJ. (l 995) 7 7 ~ the Clhicken. GAB Intema.tianal, Oxon. Russon, A.E., Bard, K.A. and Parker, S.T. (eds) (199Ci) Reachkg i~tpztothe Mincls of the Great Apes. Cambridge U~versiryPress, Cambridge. Seyfa&, R.M. and Cheney, D.L. (1992) Meaning and mhds in mo&eys., Scknt$c Amerisan, December issue, 78-84.
Chapter 3 Barlow, H,, Blakemore, 6 , and Weston-Smi~, M. (eds) (1990) Imctges and U~derstaszding.Cambrxdge Umtiversiw Press, Cambridge. Boesch, C, and Boesch, H. (1990) Tool use and tool maEng in wild e h h p m e e s , Folio P~tnalrotagia,54, 86-99. Boysen, S.T. and Capaldi, EJ. (eds) (1993) TIze Deoebpment of Mumeem1 Gampetencg: A n i m l and Human Models, Lamence Erlbam, New Jersey. Brewer, S.M. and McGrew, W.C. (1990) C~mpanzeeuse of a tool set to get honey. Folk of P1-imatobagia9 54, lO&lOLC. EZyne, R.W. (2995) P d a t e c o g ~ 6 o n :Comparing problems and sms, Anzerimn JournaE of P&matology, 3 7 1127-1 4 l. Calvin, W.H. (1994) The emergence of intelligence. Scie~c$c Anze.1-ican, October 1994, 79-85. Chevalier-Skol~koff, S. and Liska, J. (19%) Tool use of wild and eapleiive dephancs. AnhaE Behasiaur, 46, 209-2219. Delius, J.D, (l"385) Gognigve processes in pigeons. In G, DTdelvaUe (ed.) Cognition, Xr4fornzatz'i7n Processz'ng and Mo~izlathn. Elsevier, bsrerdam, pp, 3-2 8, -(l9871 Sapient sauropsids and holXel.ling homiGds. In W, Koch (ed.) Geneses of hlzguage, Brocbeyer Bochum, of the iModem Mind: mree Stages in Donald, M. (2991) O~gi:ns the Evolulhn of CaEt;zkre and Cogsition, Haward U~versiw Press, Cambridge, Emmeaon, J. and DeEus, J.B. (19"3) Beyand sensadon: Visual c o d h a n in, pigeons. In. H.P. Zeigler and BJ. Bisehaf (eds) Vision, Brain and Behaviour in Bird. M m Press, Cambridge, pp. 377-390. Gaodall, J, van Lawick (1968) T h e behaviour of free living ebhpanzees in the Gombe Seeam fieserve Tanzania, Animal Bekvbur Monographss, 1 1 6 1-3 11. Gould, J.L,and Goufd, C.C. (1994) 'h AnimE M;@$. Sciendfic h e r i c a n Library, New York, Humphrey, N.M. (1 976) "The social funcrion of intellect. In P.P.G. Bareson and R.A. Hinde (eds) Crawing Points z'n E ~ b l o ~ , Cambridge U ~ v e r s Press, i~ Cambridge, pp. 303-357, A Histop of the Mind. C h a ~ oand Whdus, London. -(2992) JsUy, A. (1966) Lemur socid behaviour and primate inteuigence, S&gnclq 153, 501-506. f,
Jones, T.B. and f i ~ l A.C. , (1973) Tool-mabg and tool-using in the M o d e m blue jay, Science, 180, 107&10"7. Kaplan, G. and Rogers, L.J. (1994) O r a ~ g - ~ t ain ~ ~Borneo. s U ~ v e r s of i ~ New England Press, Asmidale. Gebs, J.R. (1990) Food-storing birds: adaflive specialisation in brah and behaviours? Phibsqhical Transactiom of the Royal Sockly of h n h n , B, 329, X 53-1 60. Macbtosfr, N. (1994) XnteEgence in evotudon, In J. a a l f a (ed.) m a t . is In&lIz"geneeP Cambridge Universi~Press, Cambridge, Macphail, E.M. (1982) Bra& a~zdIntelligence in Vertebrate$. Clarendon Press, Oxford. MiIlikan, G.C. and Bowman, R.1. 61'367) Observations on Galhpagos tool-usim finches in eapdvity. The Livilzg Bird? 6, 23-41. Pepperberg, X.M. (1990) Concepmal abili-ry of some nonpGmate species, with an emphasis on an Mfican Grey parror' h S.T, Parker and K.R. Gibson (eds) 'bnpage' aas.ld Inteliigence irz Monkeys a d Apes. Cambfidge Universiq Press, Cambridge. RegoIk, L. and Vagortigara, G, (1995) Percepdon of pady occluded objects by young cEcks. Perception and Psychophysits, 57, "31-976. Rogers, LJ. and Kapfan, G. (1994) A new form of tool use by orang-utans in Sabah, East Malaysia. El'olia P ~ m a t ~ b g i c63, a~ 50-52. Skucch, A,F, (1996) m Mznds t?f Bird. Texas A and M U~versirgtPress, CoUege Stagon. Visalberg~,E. (1990) Tool use in GE-~us, Folk P~matologica,54, 146-1 54. Visalberg~,E. and Fragaszy, D. (1990) R o d - w a s ~ n gbehaviour in rufted capuehin monkeys, Gbus appella, and crabea~ng macaques, Macaca fascicuk?lis. Animal Behaviour, 40, 829-836. von Fersen, L, and GQnrarkan, 0, (1990) Visual n s e m o ~ lateragzafion in birds. Neuropsyc112oEogz.CZ, 28, 1-7. Westergaard, G.C. and Suomi, SJ. (1995) The manufacmre and use of bamboo tools by mo&eys: Possjible implications for the development of material culntre among East Asian hornizlids. ywmal of Arclzaeobgz'cal Skemce, 22, 577-68 1. Wrangham, R.W., LMcGrew, W.G,, de Waaf, F.B.M. and Welme, P.G. (eds) (1994) Chimpanzee Gultuws. Haward Universiq Press, Cambridge, Mass.
Chapter 4 Bayer, $,A. and &man, f . (1991) Neomr~icalDeveement. Raven Press, New York. Bonner, J.T. (1"a801 The Evotzktz'on of Gukure in Animals. Princeton Universi~Press, New Jersey. Bradshaw, J,L, and Ragers, L.J. (2903) The Evoluti'ola of b~e:eraZ AsymmetIpies, Language, n o t Use arzd Intellect. Academic Press, San Diego. Cowell, P.E., Waters, N.S. and Denenberg, V.H. (1997) The effects of earfy envixonment on the deveiopment of functional faterali~in Morris maze performance. Lateraki~,in press. Diamond, M.C. (1988) En&hi~g Herediu: The Impact of the E'nuiron~nenturz the Anulomy of the Brcaila, Free Prcss, Mew York. DeVoogd, T.J., Krebs, J.R., Healy, S.D. and Pumis, A. (1993) Kela~ons bemeen song repeaoire size and the volume af brain nuclei related to song: comparadve evolutionraq analyses amongst oscine birds. Proceedings o$ the Royal Sock@ of b ~ d o s vl$~ 254, 75-82. Eccles, f,G. (1989) Evolution of the Braia: Cre~tionctf the Seg Rorttdedge, London. -(l9921 Evolurion of consciousness, Proceedings of the LVatioszal Academy OSS&nce> 89, 7320-7324. Finlay, B,L, and Darfingon, R,B. (1995) Linked remiarides in the development and evoXurion 06 mammalian brains. Science, 268, 1578-1 584. Etch, R.W., Brown, C.P., OConnor, M. and TaUaX, P, (75993) Funcrional fateralizarion for audirom temporal processing in male and femsrle rats. Behavz"oural AVeuroscl'ence,107, 844-1350, HeEge, J.B. (1 993) Henziqbric Asymmet~y: m a t ' s L&&. Haward Universi~Press, Ga e e b s , J.R., Clayton, N.S., Healy, S.D., Cristol, C.A., Patel, S.M. and Jolliffe, A.R. (1996) "Ithe ecology of the avim brain: food-storing memory and the hippocampus. Ibis5 138, 34-46. K m b i ~ e r ,L. (1995) The arganizafisn, of neucortex in mammals: are species differences reraUy so different? T~ends Nezlroscz'erzces, 18, 408-4 17. and Kaw, J. (1995) The emergence and evolueioo 379.
DS QF THEIR QW
Notteboh, F. (1989) From bird songs to neurogenesis. Sekntqic Anzeeca~,Febmary, 5 M1. Petersen, S.E., Fox, P.T., Pasner, M.X., Minnxn, M. and RaicMe, M.E, (1988) Posieon e ~ s s i o ntornographic studies of the codcal anatomy of single-word processing, Nature, 331, 595-589, Popper, K.R. and Eccles, f.G. (1977) The Self and Its B r a i ~ , Sp~ger-Verlag,Berlin. Rogers, LJ. (1995) The Developmenl of B r a i ~and Behavioar in the Clhkken. Cab International, Oxon, UK. Saito, N. and Maekawa, M. (1993) Birdsong: &c interface with human lanmage. Brain and Development, 15, 31-40, Sawaschi, T, (1992) The size of the neocoaex in reladon to ecology and social smcmre in monkeys and apes. FoZia PGnaa&Eogica, 58, 131-1 45, Spewy? R. (1983) Science and MoraEi~.Bas3 BXachell, Oxhrd. VztUadgcnra, 6 ,and h d r e w , R.J. (199l) Laceralizadon of response by chicks to a change in a model pamer, Ar%&etk Behzriour, 41, 187-194.
Bisazza, A., Cantalupo, C,, Robins, A., Rogers, LJ. and VaXlortigara, G. (19"3f i)Ri&t-pawedness in toads, N~tzare, 379, 408, Calvk, W.H. (1891) The Ascent of Mkd: lee Age Climates and the Evolzdt&sz of Inteltigeme. Bantam Books, New York, -(1994) T h e emergence of inreuigence. Sci'enr:$c A n z e ~ c ~ q October, 79-85. Ghangeux, J-P. and ChavaiIIon, J, (eds) (1995;) Okgins of ihe Hgman Brain. CEarendoxl Press, Oxford, Corbatfis, M.C. (1991) The b$si&d Ape, Oxford U ~ v e r s i vPress, Oxford, Diamond, J, (2991) The Rise and Fa21 of the Third Glhimpanzee:. Vintage, London. E&ot5 D, and Roy, E,A, (eds) (1996) Manual Asymmtrzles irz Motm IJerfomance, CRC: Press, Boca &ton. Fak, D. (1992) Brahdame. H e w Holt, New York, -(l9921 Evolu~onof the brain and cognition in h Sixty-Seeorad J7am Arthur LRclture an the Evolutioa of kkze
Humarz Bra&. The h e r i c a n Museum of Namral Histoq, New York. Fine, M.1,, McElroy, D., Rafi, J., Gng, G.B., Loesser, K.E. and Newon, S. (1W96) Lateralisadon of pectoral stridujadon sound producrion in the channel catfish. PhyskEpt6ty and BektavGzkr, 60, 753-757. FuUagar, R.L.M., Price, U.M. and Head, L.M. 09963 Early human occupation of n o d e r n Ausu-alia: archeologgr and ehermoXurninescence da~xligof Jinhum rock-shelter, N o h e m 70, 75 1-773. T e r ~ f o v Antiquity, , Gibson, K.R. and Ingold, T. (1993) Tools, h ~ g g a g eand Cognision 2"n Haman Bvolzktwn. Cambridge Universiw Press, Cambridge, Leakey, R, (1994) The Oegin of Humankid. Phoenix, London. MacNeilage, P.F., Snxddea-Kemedy, M.G. and Lindblarn, B. (19873 PI"rimate handedness reconsidered. Behvioctural and Brain Sciemes, 10, 247-303. Marchant, L.F. and McGrew, W.C, (1996) Laterszli~ of limb hnction in wild cKmpamees at: Gombe Nal;ionaI Park: comprehensive smdy of spontaneous ac%vities. Journal of Human EvoEutiofi, 30, 427-443. Marchant, L.F., McGrew, W.C. and Eibl-Eibesfeldt, E. (1995) Is human handedness universal? Eaological analyses from three 1Of , 239-258, tradibonal c u l m ~ s Ethobo, , MeGrew, W.C, and Marchant, L,F. (2992) Chimpanzees, toots, and termites: Hand preference or handedrzess? Cuwesat Anthropology? 33, ll.cd-119. Noble, W. and Bavidson, X. (1996) Human E'sldlution, hnguage and Mind, Cambridge Universi~Press, Carnb~dge. Rogers, L.J. (1980) Lateralizarion in the ati.ian brain. Bird Betzavhur, 2, 1-22. Rogers, LJ. and Kaplan, G. (1996) Wand preferences and other lateral biases in rehabili~tedorang-utans, Pongo pygnaaeus. Anzinal Eiehmz'our, 51, 13-25. Sugiyama, E"., Fushimi, T., Sahra, 0. and ttlatsuz;lvva, T. (1993) Eland preference and tool use in wild chbpanzees. P~mates, 34, 155--159. S ~ s h e r C.C. , BI, K&, WJ., Antdn, S.G., Schwarcz, H.P., Cuds, G.H., Suprijo, A. and Widiasmoro (1996) Latest Homo mectus of Java: Potential contemporanei~ with Home sapiens in Soulll.leasr Asia. Science, 274, 1870-1 874. To&, N. (1985) kchedogical evidence for preferential ri&thandedness in the lower and middje Pleistocene, and its
MMDS OF THEIR O W
possible implica~ons.Journal c$ Human Evclla~iar~,14, 607634,
Ward, J.P, and Hopkns, W,D, (1993) PnrZmateLtemlily: Czkment Beha212aaraZ Evidence of P ~ m a t eAsymmetkes. Springer-Verlag, New York.
Barchas, P.R* and Barchas, J.D. (1977) SoeiophairmacaXol~y.In J.D. Barchas, P.A. Besger, R.D. Ciaranelto and G,R. Egiot (eds) 1 3 s y c ~ h a m a c o b ~From : 7:heo;rgr to h e t i c e . Oxford Universi~Press, Oxford, pp, 80-87. Benne~r, M.R. (1977) The Idea of Gonsciousnt?ss. Hamood Academic, New York. Boysen, S.T. (1994) Irrdividual differences in the cognitive a b ~ t i e s of chimpanzees. In R.W. Wranghaxn, W.C. McGrew, F.63.M. de Waal and P.G. Helme (eds) Chitnpa~zxeeC;"uhares.Haward University Press, Camb~dge,pp, 335-350. Chalxners, DJ. (1996) The Csnzscz'aus rtla~d,Oxford Universiw Press, Oxford. Demett, D.G. (X 99 1) Consciousness Exphzlned, Little, Brawn and Company, Boston. Hameroff, S.R., Gszniak, A,W, and Scoa, A.E, (eds) (1996) 7"ow~rda Science of Conschzssness: The First Tucson Discassio~s and Debates, Mli" Press, Cambridge. Heyes, C,M, (1993) Anecdotes, ~ain,ing,@trapping and triangulation: do anirnds a ~ b u r emental states? Animal Behaahurg 46, 177-188. Horn, G. (1988) m a t can the bird brah tell us about &ought wirbrout lanwage? In L, Weishana (ed,) ThuglZZ~ Withut kngzdage. Clarendon Press, Qdord, pp. 2"7-304. Mites, W.L.W. (1990) 'The eomihve foundations for reference in a signhg asanmtan, In S.T. Parker and K.R. Gibson Qeds) 'hnguage3kalad IntellTl;genm ziz Monkys and Apes. Camb~dge Universi~yPress, Cambridge, pp. 51 1-539. Pa~erson,E;. and Gordon W. (5993) The case for the personhood of g o s a s . In F. Gavalie2-i and P. Singes ((cds) The @ e a ~Ape PTO~~CL*. Fou& Estate, London, pp. 58-"i". Paaerson, F. and Linden, E. ( X 98 1) % Educalion a j Kokct. h d r e Deutsclz, London.
FURTHER READmG
Rose, S, and Rose, H. (1970) Science and Society. Penwin Books, Harmondswo&, Savage-Rumbaugh, S. and &win, R. (1994) Kalazi: T h e Ape at rdze B ~ e kof zhe H ~ m a nMind, John W3ey and Sons, New York. Weiskrantz, L. (1995) "me problem with. a n h a l consciousness in rela~onro neuropsychofom. Betzau;iourczt Brain Research, 7 1, 1"7-175.
Mlen, C. and Beksff3 M, (1995) Cognidve e&alow and the inten~onaliwaf animal behaviour.. M i d and hnguage, 10, 3 13-328. B a ~ s o n ,P, (1991) Assessment of pain in a ~ m d sAlzimal , Behaviour, 42, 82%-.839. Bekoff, M. (19'34) Gog~rivee l f i o l o ~and the weatment of als: How m a ~ e r sof d infom m a ~ e r sof welfare. A n h l WeFare, 3, 75-96. Beston, H. (19'7l) The Outermost House: a Year of Lge on the @eat Beach of Gape &d. BalXandne Books, New York, Ori@nal edi.eion: Hok, Knebart and Winston, 1928. Bkke, L. (19%) Femz'nislin, Animals and Skence, Open University Press, Buckingham. Cavafiei, P. and Singer, P, (eds) (1993) The fieat Ape Project. Four& Estate, London, DawEns, M.S. (1980) ArzzmaE Saflerz'ng, T h Scienc~.of Animal WeEf;zre.Chapman and Hall, Landon. Huffman, M.A. and Wrangham, R-W, (1994) D i v e n i ~of medicinal plant use by chhpamees in the wild. In K.W. Wrangham, W.C. McGrew, F.B.M. de Waal and P.G. Helme (eds) Chimpanzee Cultures. Harvard Universtw Press, Cambridge, Mass., pp, 129-148. Ingold, T, (ed.) m a c is an Animal? Men a d Unwin, London. Manning, A, and SerpeU, j. (eds) (1994) Animals and Human Society: Changing Perspectkes. Rouaedge, X_,ondan. NieoX, GJ. (1996) F a n animal cognition. A n i m l Science, 62, 375-39 1. PavinelZi, DJ., Nelson, K.E. and Boysen, S.T. (1992) Comprehension of role reversal in chimpanzees: e ~ d e n c eof empa&yl Animal Behau.e"aur, 43, 633-640.
Rogers, L.J. (1995) The Deuebpmeat of B~ainand Bek~viourin the Chichn. GAB Internafisnal, Oxon, UK, RoUins, B.E. (1981) Animal Rights and Human Morality. Prome&eus Booh, Buffalo, -(l9891 The U n h ~ & dCry: Animl Conscbusrress, A n k a l Pain a d Seiem. Oxforcl Ifniversir-4. Press, Oxford, ----(l 995) P ~ r nAnimal WeFczre, Sock& Bi~ethicaland Research Islssws, Iowa State U ~ v e r s i wPress, Ames. Singel; It-". (19"75) A n i ~ lLn'bmatz'sn. New York Review Press, Mew York. Wood-Gush, D.G,M, (l"a83) Elements c?f Eishob~.Chapman and Wart, h n d o n , Wood-ash, D.G.M., DawEns, M. and Ewba&> R. (eds) (l"381) Seg-awreness ie Zlomestic~&dAnimls. The U ~ v e r s i ~ eFeds slf Welfare, HedordsKrre, UK.
INDEX
a d a p t a b i l i ~60-1 ~ see aksa intelligence Alex, see parrot allocoftex, see neocortex Alman, J,, l 11-1 2 h e s l a n , sea sign lanmage
amphibia fiogs, 126 toads, 144-5 Andrew, RJ,, 21, 126-7 an&rogomorphism, 6-7 ape, 9-11, 27, 34, 36, 43, 63, 73-11., 85, 114, 132, 193 Great Ape Project, 190, 194 art, see mental representations a t ~ m d e sto animals, 5, 14, 166-8, 181-5, 190, 195 ausuraiopithecine, 130, 139 see also hominid automata, see BescaIZian awareness 13, 3 X -3 development of, 16-22 of others, 31-54 of self, 15-31 see atsv consciousness
Barchas, J.D., 168 Barchas, I",R,, 168 bat, S1 Bateson, P,, 195
Bayer, S.A., 111-12 Beston, H., 181-2 bipedafism, 2, l 17, 130, X 33, 138-42 bird, 36, 46, 50, 58, 63, 72, 85-8, 128, 147, 160-1 brain size in, 92-3, 96103, 112 tool using in, 85-8 bird song, 9, 36, 97-9, 103, 124 Birke, L., 183 EPisazza, A., 144 blind, SS, 156 blind sight 89 blood supply to brain, 111.0-1 blue jay, 86 Boesch, C., 41, 82 Bonner, J.L., 93 bonobo, see chimpanzee Bowman, R.X., 85, 87 Boysen, S,T,, 71, 173 brain size effect o f experience on, 99-101 in humans, 94-5, 115-19, 129, 136-42 ra?5o to body weight, 92-6, 102-7 Brewer, S,.&%., 83 Broca, P,, 94
Rroca's aaraa, 153-6 broken-wing displq, 48-9; see also deception burial, 162-3 butterfly, 51 buzzard, 88 Byme, R. W., 28, 35, 49-50 Calvin, W.H., 132 Cartesian, see Descartian cat, 17, 50, 183, 145, 173 cavalieri, P,, 190 Ghalmers, DJ,, 180 Chanrek, see orang-utan cheating3 see deeepdon C h e v a l i e r - S k o l n i S., 93 Cheyne, D.L., 33, 38, 40, 42 chicken, 16, 20-2, 37-83, 63, 77-81, 97, 126-8, 166, 184-5 chimpanzee, 23-7, 30, 35, 41-4, 51, 60, 63, '70-1, 82-13> 85, 131-2, 139, 146, 150, 160, 167-9, 172 Kanzi, 11, 174, 176 Loulis, 42 Nim, 10 Panbanisha, f 76 Sarah, 9 Sheba, 71 Washoe, 9-1 1, 42 Clapon, N.S., 96, 100-1, 103 Clever Ham, I 0 climatic change, 133, 137-23 cockroach, 20 cognirion, 6 , 13, 30, 45-6, 50-1, 56-7, 61, 68, 72-3, 84, 91-2, 95-45 defini~onof, 56 communica~on,10, 31, 37-4 1, 69-70, 81, 157, 159, 173-8 see also bird song; language; vocalisation
campuur, see intelligence consciousne~s elecufical and molecular basis of, 4, 90- 1, 1 12, 178-9 meaning of 1-5, 8-9, 12-13, 15, 45, 58, 76, 89, 122, 124, 129, 152, 162 reladonship to animal wegare, 18690 see also awareness; intelligence Corbalfis, M.C., 148 corpus caflosum, l 2 l, 128 cortex, 186, 128, f 54-6 see also neocorrex; paleoeortex coundng, 70-1 Cowell, !?,E., 128 crow, 86 eulmre, vansrnission of, 32, 59, 158 Darlinson, R.B., l 15-18, 141 Damin, C., 5-4, 11-12 Bavidson, I,, 136, 155, l63 Dawkins, M.S., 4, 32, 187 deceprion, 44-5 l decision making, "7, 53 Delius, J.D., 68, 69-71 dendrons, 113-1 4 Denenberg, V.H., 128 Dennett, D.C,, 180 Descarres, R., 5, 15, S1 Descartian, 5-6, 15, 167 designer animals, 185 r)eL7oogd, TJ., 98 Diamond, M.G., 99, 102 DNA, see genes d o g 2, 15, 32, 45-6, SO, 52, 53, 55, 72, 173, 184, 188, 190 dolphin, 31 Donald, M., 74-5, 199 domestication, 184-6 dreams, 177
Eccles, J.C., 106, 113, 122, 124 Eibel-Eibesfeldr, I., 76, 142-3 elephant, 29-30, 72, 85, 92 Emrnerton, f,, 76 emotions, 16, 31, 122, 175, 188 Epstein, R,, 30 Evans, C.S., 37 evoluGon of the brain, IS, 91-1 19, 160 of humans, 130-6 recapitulation, I 8-1 9 theory of, 5, 11-12, 58, 94 of vertebrates, 95, 107 experience, 99-1 9 l, 168-9 exploitation of animals, see welfare of animals eye gaze, 33-6
Fa&, D., 140-1, 155 feeling, see sendence Gnch, 86-7 Fine, M.I., 145 Rnlay, B.E,., X 15-18, 141 Fischbach, G.D., 123 fish brain size in, 92-3 faterafisation In, 245, 147 Fitch, R.H., 126 food storing in birds, 72, 96-7, 106-1, 115, 118 in mammals, 114 Fragaszy, D., 64 Freud, S,, 2 frog, 126 frontal lobes, see prefrontal cortex Fultagar, R.L.K., 158 Gale& B., 32 Gallup, G., 24, 26-7, 30 Gardncr, R.A., I), 11, 171 Gardner, T.T., 9, 11, 171 gaze, see eye gaze
genes, 131 see also hybridisation of genes; evoturion glial cells, 90, 102 in Einstein's brain, 102 Gore, R., 134 gorilla, 27, 60, 131, 139 Koko, 22, 27, 75, 132-3, 1754, 188, 191-3 Great Ape Project, 190, X 94 Griffin, D.R., S, E: GQntiirkan, Q,, 71 Gyger, M,, 38, 47 habits, 2 handedness, 11S), 130, 142-4 see also lateralisaeian of the brain hands, 1 15-16, 130, 140, 142, 140, 157 Hauser, M., 23, 28-9 Heyes, C., 26, 166-7 hippocampus, 96-7, 106-1, 103 hominid, 73, 84, 87, 133-42, 159 hamineid, see ape Hums erectas, 135, 143, I42 Humo habs'lis, 133, 137, 143, 151-2, 155-7 Home sapkns, see humans Horn, G., 166-7 humans, 1-2, 9, 16-19, 33-5, 42, 53, 62, 68, 71, 75, 81, 85, 165, 121, 124, 130-64, 172, 178 brain size in, 94-5, 115-1 9, 129, 136-42 Wumphrey, N.K., 59, 88, 161 Hunt, E,, 86 hunting, see intenrionaliry hybPidisation of genes, 131-2 ideas, see mental representations
irnitaeion, SS, 62 imprindng, se@fearning individual variarion, 19, 54, 171-3, 182-3 insight, see pr&Iem solving insri~uPiondisa.tion, 170 see also experience inrdligence, 2, 13, 50, 55-81, 89, 91, 94, 95, 104, 107, 138, 161, 170 anirnai intelligence, 1 computer intdfigence, 2-2 Eysenck intelligence rest, 6&8 passim, 193 IQ, 5&7, 155, 191-4 see also cognirion; problem solving inmtionaliq, 51-3, 130, X 52 hternal representarions, see mental representations IQ, see intelligence isocortex, see neoconex James, W,, 22 jerison, H.J., 93 Jolly, A,, 59, I61 Jones, T.B., 86
Karnil, A.C., 86 Manzi, see chimpanzee Kaplan, G. 10, 59, 61, 83, 146 hucMe walking, 132, X 39 Koko, see gorilla &ebs, J.R., 72, 96, 98, 100-1, 1Q3 b b i t z e r , J., 112-14 language, 2, 8-13, 18, 39, 119-23, 125, 129-30, 136, 153-61, 163, 173 see aka s i p langtlage larynx, 157 lateralisaeon of the brain, 2, 91, 119-29, 153, 164
see also handedness Le Ban, G,, 95 hakey, R., 147 learning, 2 1 imprinfing, 63, 73 learning theory, 62 ogterant learning, 66-9, 7 1-2 spariaf learning, 96-7 Lethmate, J., S3 Lewin, R,, 178 Linden, E., 175, 193 Iion, 5% sea lion, 157 Liska, J., 93 Llinaus, R., 9I Loulis, see chimpanzee lyre bird, 35 McFadand, D., 13 rMcGrew, W.G,, 83, 142-3, 146, 149 MacKntosh, N., 88 MaeNeiXage, P.P., 146 magpie, 36 Manning, A., 198 Marchant, L., 142-3, 146, 149 Marler, P*, 37-8, 47 Marten, K., 31 memow, 20, 71-5, 512, 186 see also learning mentaf at~ibutisn,43, 54, 166, I70 mental representations, 2, 7, 75-81, 158 Miles, H.L.W., 191 Miltikan, G.G., 85, 87 icry, 10, 36, 50-1 mind attribution of, 43, 54, 166, 170 state of, 42-4 theory of, 41 mirrors, see recognition
mionlpey, 17, 27-9, 33, 38-41, 44-5, 49-50, 64-5, 81, 84-5, 138-9, 145-6, 154-5, 170, 172-3, 178 brain size in, 9 2 4 , 109-1 11, 117 Munn, C-A., 46 mutations, 131 neocartex, 91, 107-18, 124, 141 see also cortex nerve cell, see neuron neuron, 90, 92, 96, 100, 102-3 Nirn, see chimpanzee Noble, W., 136, 155, 163 Nottebohm, F., 97-9, 103, 124-5 nut craclcing, see tool using object constancy, '76-9 occiipital, I20 orang-utan, 59-61, 63, 72, 83, 165, 131-2, 139, 146-8 Chantek, 191-2 orcer, 85 pain, feeling of, see sentience paleocortex, 107-8, l 17 see also cortex Pmbanisha, see chimpanzee Parker, S.T,, 28 parnot, 36, 69-70, 72, 145, I77 Alex, 69-70, 174-5, 177 Paaerson, F,, 175 Pepperberg, I.M., 69-70, l 74 Piaget, J., 76 pigeon, 30, 66-9, 71-2, 97 planning ahead, see inteationatiq Popper, K.R., 122 possum, t l 6 PovineUi, D., 25, 29-30, 43-4, 48, 167, 169 prefrontal cortex, 113-1 5, X 29-60 see also cortex; neocortex
Prernack, D., 9, 41, 43 Preuss, T.M., 25 primate, see monkey; ape problem salving, 43, 61-8, 105, 114 Psarakos, S., 31 pyramidal cells, 113-1 4 rat, 32, 99-100, 106, 125-6, 128, 145 recapitulation, 18-1 9 recognition of other individuals, 21, 32, 73, X27 of partly hidden objects, 79-81 of self in mirrors, 22-31 red-spot test, 2.2-6, 169, 172 re-educ~onism,178 Regolin, L,, 78-80 representations, see mental representations repciite, 107 brain size in, 9 2 4 rights of animals, 190-5 Romanes, GJ., 6 Rose, H,, I66 Rose, S., 166 Russon, A.E., 35 Sarah, see chimpanzee Savage-Rumbaugh, S., l I, 174, 176-8 Sawaguchi, 'F., 1QG9 Scheibel, A, 102 Schull, J,, 61 search images, see mental representaaions Sefar*, R.M., 33, 38, 40, 42 sentience, 3, 14-15, 16, 18-19, 53, 180, 186-8 Serpell, J,, 198 Sheba, see chhpanzee sign language, 9-1 1, 69, 75, 175-7, I88
Singer, P*, 185, 190 singng in birds, see bird song; communication; vocalisation social behaviour, 32-3, 59, 74, 161, 169 relationsEp to brain size, l t O song nuclei, 97-9, 123 sec? also bird song speech, see language Sperry, R., 30, 121, 122 split-brain, 121-2 Steimerz, H., 120 srress, 47, 183-90 see also welhre of animals subconscious, see unconscious suffering, 53-4 stress, 47, 189-90 welfare of animals, 3, 14, 183-90 see aksa emorians; seneience Sugiyarna, V., l49 Suomi, SJ., 84 Swisher, C.G., 135 symbols, 57, 158 see also mental represenzaeions synapses, 100 syrinx, 98-1 24 tamarin, cotton top, 28-9 see also monkey teaeEng, 4 1-2 temperament, 20 termille fishing by chimpanzees, see t a d using Terrace, H,$., 18 toads, 144-5 tool using, 2, 41, S1-2, 81-8,
124, 130, 140, 143, f 48, 151-3, 163-4 in birds, 85-8 in capuchins, 149-50 nut c=rac~ng382, 149-5 t termite fishing, 51, 82, 149 tool m a k g , 143, 151-2 To&, N., 1 4 3 4 , 147 unconscious, t -3, 122 ungulates, 72-3 brain size in, l l'? ValIorrigara, G,, 21, 76-80, 127, I44 versarilizy, see adaptability Visalberghi, E,, 64, 84-5 vocalisation of birds, 46-8, 70, 97-9, 125, 148, 153, 164 of chickens, 20, 3 1, 37 of frogs, 126 of mokeys, 33, 38-41, 81 of rats, 125-6 von Fersen, L., 71 vuIture, 88 Ward, J.P., X45 washing of potatoes by monkeys, 63-6 Washoe, see chimpanzee Waters) N.S., 128 welfare of animals, 3, 14, 1133-90 Wemicke's area, 153-4 Wesrergaard, G.G., X4 Whiten, A., 8, 49 Woodruff; G., 43